Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T06:42:35.528Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Extending the paradigm: a policy framework for healthy and equitable eating (HE2)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 August 2018

Melanie Pescud*
Affiliation:
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax Institute, Ultimo, Australia Menzies Centre for Health Policy, School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet), ANU College of Asia & the Pacific, Australian National University, Room 3.34 Coombs Extension Building, Building 8 Fellows Road, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
Sharon Friel
Affiliation:
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax Institute, Ultimo, Australia Menzies Centre for Health Policy, School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet), ANU College of Asia & the Pacific, Australian National University, Room 3.34 Coombs Extension Building, Building 8 Fellows Road, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
Amanda Lee
Affiliation:
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax Institute, Ultimo, Australia
Gary Sacks
Affiliation:
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax Institute, Ultimo, Australia World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Obesity Prevention, Deakin University, Burwood, Australia
Elizabeth Meertens
Affiliation:
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax Institute, Ultimo, Australia National Heart Foundation of Australia, Melbourne, Australia
Rob Carter
Affiliation:
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax Institute, Ultimo, Australia Centre for Population Health Research, Deakin University, Burwood, Australia
Megan Cobcroft
Affiliation:
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax Institute, Ultimo, Australia Centre for Population Health, NSW Ministry of Health, North Sydney, Australia
Elizabeth Munn
Affiliation:
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax Institute, Ultimo, Australia Centre for Population Health, NSW Ministry of Health, North Sydney, Australia
Joanne Greenfield
Affiliation:
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax Institute, Ultimo, Australia Health Improvement Branch, ACT Government, Canberra, Australia
*
*Corresponding author: Email [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objective

The current short communication aimed to provide a new conceptualisation of the policy drivers of inequities in healthy eating and to make a call to action to begin populating this framework with evidence of actions that can be taken to reduce the inequities in healthy eating.

Design

The Healthy and Equitable Eating (HE2) Framework derives from a systems-based analytical approach involving expert workshops.

Setting

Australia.

Subjects

Academics, government officials and non-government organisations in Australia.

Results

The HE2 Framework extends previous conceptualisations of policy responses to healthy eating to include the social determinants of healthy eating and its social distribution, encompassing policy areas including housing, social protection, employment, education, transport, urban planning, plus the food system and environment.

Conclusions

As the burden of non-communicable diseases continues to grow globally, it is important that governments, practitioners and researchers focus attention on the development and implementation of policies beyond the food system and environment that can address the social determinants of inequities in healthy eating.

Type
Short Communication
Copyright
© The Authors 2018 

Poor diet is the leading preventable risk factor globally for many non-communicable diseases( 1 ). People who experience greater social disadvantage have poorer diets and consequentially increased risks of non-communicable diseases( Reference Novaković, Cavelaars and Geelen 2 Reference Shaikh, Siahpush and Singh 4 ).

Much research has highlighted the relationships between food systems and local food environments and healthy eating( Reference Swinburn, Sacks and Hall 5 Reference Townshend and Lake 8 ). Accordingly, policy-focused global initiatives have identified effective nutrition policy actions aimed at improving food environments. NOURISHING was developed to identify policy areas and actions that promote healthy eating, and to create a framework that facilitates the ongoing monitoring, reporting and communication of policy actions for the use of policy makers( Reference Hawkes, Jewell and Allen 9 ). The Healthy Food Environment Policy Index (Food-EPI), developed by INFORMAS (International Network for Food and Obesity/Non-communicable Diseases Research, Monitoring and Action Support), is a tool for monitoring and evaluating public-sector policies relating to the food environment for the purpose of strengthening accountability across sectors with the goal to reduce non-communicable diseases( Reference Swinburn, Sacks and Vandevijvere 10 Reference Vandevijvere, Mackay and Swinburn 12 ).

Increasingly, there is evidence suggesting that a number of the determinants of healthy eating, and particularly the social inequities in healthy eating, exist outside the food system and food environments( Reference Friel, Hattersley and Ford 13 Reference Taylor, Tan and Coyle 16 ). To date, however, there has been no analytical approach to help guide the identification of policy actions targeting the social determinants of inequities in healthy eating and to provide an organising framework for good practice in these policy areas. The purpose of the current short communication is to present social determinants of inequities in a healthy and equitable eating policy framework (hereafter the HE2 Framework) and to make a call to action to populate the framework with effective policies.

The HE2 Framework derives from a recent study, whereby a systems-based causal loop diagram of the inequities in healthy eating was produced. The purpose of that analysis and diagram was both to illustrate the complexity of determinants of inequities in healthy eating and to provide a basis for planning for the prevention of inequities in healthy eating by traversing multiple levels of causes and policies( Reference Friel, Pescud and Malbon 14 ). The proposed policy domains of the HE2 Framework emerged from the sub-systems featuring within the systems diagram. Overarching policy statements were then generated for each domain using expert knowledge from the research team and literature.

The HE2 Framework

The HE2 Framework is presented in Table 1. It includes policy domains and an overarching statement for each policy domain. As Table 2 highlights, the HE2 Framework presents a conceptual innovation for addressing inequities in healthy eating. It provides an organising policy framework for populating the domains of housing, social protection, employment, education, transport, planning, and the food system and environment. HE2 complements and extends existing frameworks, such as NOURISHING and Food-EPI, to include the social determinants of inequities in healthy eating (Table 2).

Table 1 The Healthy and Equitable Eating (HE2) Framework

Table 2 Policy domains and actions included in the NOURISHING, Healthy Food Environment Policy Index (Food-EPI) and Healthy and Equitable Eating (HE2) frameworks

NCD, non-communicable disease.

Yes = included in the framework; No = not included in framework.

A call to action

This is a call to researchers and policy makers globally to expand their conceptualisation of the drivers of inequities in healthy eating to include the social determinants and to populate the HE2 Framework with evidence-based policies in each of these domains. A key next step will involve engagement with stakeholders in the policy domains of housing, social protection, employment, education, transport, planning and the food system to gain a better understanding of the different values and sectoral goals. This will enable identification of mutually beneficial outcomes that will help effect changes in these areas. Ultimately, it will be important to benchmark and monitor the policy actions within each of the domains. Benchmarking and monitoring could follow a similar methodology to that used in Food-EPI INFORMAS( Reference Vandevijvere and Swinburn 17 ). This process requires input from government representatives who are charged with providing evidence relating to the types of policies and stages of implementation in their various jurisdictions. The HE2 Framework represents an important step in advancing work in the area of the social determinants of inequities in health, and in particular healthy eating. As the epidemics of non-communicable diseases and obesity continue, and the associated inequities widen in many instances, it is important that governments, practitioners and researchers focus attention on the development and implementation of policies beyond the food environment that can address the social determinants of inequities in healthy eating.

Acknowledgements

Financial support: This research was supported by The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre through the National Health and Medical Research Council Partnership Centre grant scheme (grant number GNT9100001) with the Australian Government Department of Health, the NSW Ministry of Health, ACT Health and the HCF Research Foundation. At the time of the research, M.C. and E.M. were working for the NSW Ministry of Health and J.G. was working for the ACT Government, who are funders of The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre. Conflict of interest: None. Authorship: S.F. received funding to conduct the study. All authors developed the original idea for the study. M.P. drafted the initial version of the manuscript and all authors critically reviewed and approved of the final version. Ethics of human subject participation: Not applicable.

References

1. World Health Organization (2013) Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases 2013–2020. Geneva: WHO.Google Scholar
2. Novaković, R, Cavelaars, A, Geelen, A et al. (2014) Socio-economic determinants of micronutrient intake and status in Europe: a systematic review. Public Health Nutr 17, 10311045.Google Scholar
3. Allen, L, Williams, J, Townsend, N et al. (2017) Socioeconomic status and non-communicable disease behavioural risk factors in low-income and lower-middle-income countries: a systematic review. Lancet Glob Health 5, e277e289.Google Scholar
4. Shaikh, RA, Siahpush, M, Singh, GK et al. (2015) Socioeconomic status, smoking, alcohol use, physical activity, and dietary behavior as determinants of obesity and body mass index in the United States: findings from the National Health Interview Survey. Int J MCH AIDS 4, 2234.Google Scholar
5. Swinburn, BA, Sacks, G, Hall, KD et al. (2011) The global obesity pandemic: shaped by global drivers and local environments. Lancet 378, 804814.Google Scholar
6. Roberto, CA, Swinburn, B, Hawkes, C et al. (2015) Patchy progress on obesity prevention: emerging examples, entrenched barriers, and new thinking. Lancet 385, 24002409.Google Scholar
7. Swinburn, B, Kraak, V, Rutter, H et al. (2015) Strengthening of accountability systems to create healthy food environments and reduce global obesity. Lancet 385, 25342545.Google Scholar
8. Townshend, T & Lake, A (2017) Obesogenic environments: current evidence of the built and food environments. Perspect Public Health 137, 3844.Google Scholar
9. Hawkes, C, Jewell, J & Allen, K (2013) A food policy package for healthy diets and the prevention of obesity and diet‐related non‐communicable diseases: the NOURISHING framework. Obes Rev 14, 159168.Google Scholar
10. Swinburn, B, Sacks, G, Vandevijvere, S et al. (2013) INFORMAS (International Network for Food and Obesity/non‐communicable diseases Research, Monitoring and Action Support): overview and key principles. Obes Rev 14, 112.Google Scholar
11. Phulkerd, S, Vandevijvere, S, Lawrence, M et al. (2017) Level of implementation of best practice policies for creating healthy food environments: assessment by state and non-state actors in Thailand. Public Health Nutr 20, 381390.Google Scholar
12. Vandevijvere, S, Mackay, S & Swinburn, B (2017) Benchmarking Food Environments 2017: Progress by the New Zealand Government on Implementing Recommended Food Environment Policies and Prioritised Recommendations. https://figshare.com/articles/Benchmarking_Food_Environments_Progress_by_the_new_Zealand_Government_on_Implementing_Recommended_Food_Environment_Policies_and_Prioritised_recommendations_2017_/5673472 (accessed August 2018).Google Scholar
13. Friel, S, Hattersley, L, Ford, L et al. (2015) Addressing inequities in healthy eating. Health Promot Int 30, ii77ii88.Google Scholar
14. Friel, S, Pescud, M, Malbon, E et al. (2017) Using systems science to understand the determinants of inequities in healthy eating. PLoS One 12, e0188872.Google Scholar
15. Hawkes, C & Popkin, BM (2015) Can the sustainable development goals reduce the burden of nutrition-related non-communicable diseases without truly addressing major food system reforms? BMC Med 13, 143.Google Scholar
16. Taylor, LA, Tan, AX, Coyle, CE et al. (2016) Leveraging the social determinants of health: what works? PLoS One 11, e0160217.Google Scholar
17. Vandevijvere, S & Swinburn, B (2015) Pilot test of the Healthy Food Environment Policy Index (Food-EPI) to increase government actions for creating healthy food environments. BMJ Open 5, e006194.Google Scholar
18. Pollack, CE, Griffin, BA & Lynch, J (2010) Housing affordability and health among homeowners and renters. Am J Prev Med 39, 515521.Google Scholar
19. Patrick, H & Nicklas, TA (2005) A review of family and social determinants of children’s eating patterns and diet quality. J Am Coll Nutr 24, 8392.Google Scholar
20. Harrison, M, Lee, A, Findlay, M et al. (2010) The increasing cost of healthy food. Aust N Z J Public Health 34, 179186.Google Scholar
21. Lee, AJ, Kane, S, Ramsey, R et al. (2016) Testing the price and affordability of healthy and current (unhealthy) diets and the potential impacts of policy change in Australia. BMC Public Health 16, 315.Google Scholar
22. Lee, A, Ni Mhurchu, C, Sacks, G et al. (2013) Monitoring the price and affordability of foods and diets globally. Obes Rev 14, 8295.Google Scholar
23. Pettigrew, S, Moore, S, Pratt, IS et al. (2016) Evaluation outcomes of a long-running adult nutrition education programme. Public Health Nutr 19, 743752.Google Scholar
24. Sisson, LG & Lown, DA (2011) Do soup kitchen meals contribute to suboptimal nutrient intake & obesity in the homeless population? J Hunger Environ Nutr 6, 312323.Google Scholar
25. Wilson, A, Szwed, N & Renzaho, A (2012) Developing nutrition guidelines for recycled food to improve food security among homeless, asylum seekers, and refugees in Victoria, Australia. J Hunger Environ Nutr 7, 239252.Google Scholar
26. Monsivais, P, Aggarwal, A & Drewnowski, A (2014) Time spent on home food preparation and indicators of healthy eating. Am J Prev Med 47, 796802.Google Scholar
27. Dixon, J, Woodman, D, Strazdins, L et al. (2014) Flexible employment, flexible eating and health risks. Crit Public Health 24, 461475.Google Scholar
28. Braveman, P, Egerter, S & Williams, DR (2011) The social determinants of health: coming of age. Annu Rev Public Health 32, 381398.Google Scholar
29. Marmot, M, Allen, J, Bell, R et al. (2012) WHO European review of social determinants of health and the health divide. Lancet 380, 10111029.Google Scholar
30. Arnold, CG & Sobal, J (2000) Food practices and nutrition knowledge after graduation from the Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program (EFNEP). J Nutr Educ 32, 130138.Google Scholar
31. Dollahite, JS, Pijai, EI, Scott-Pierce, M et al. (2014) A randomized controlled trial of a community-based nutrition education program for low-income parents. J Nutr Educ Behav 46, 102109.Google Scholar
32. Home Economics Institute of Australia (2010) Position Paper: Home Economics and the Australian Curriculum. http://www.heia.com.au/resources/documents/HEIA_position_paper_home_economics_australian_curriculum.pdf (accessed August 2018).Google Scholar
33. Fung, C, McIsaac, J-LD, Kuhle, S et al. (2013) The impact of a population-level school food and nutrition policy on dietary intake and body weights of Canadian children. Prev Med 57, 934940.Google Scholar
34. Pettigrew, S, Donovan, RJ, Jalleh, G et al. (2014) Predictors of positive outcomes of a school food provision policy in Australia. Health Promot Int 29, 317327.Google Scholar
35. Dibsdall, L, Lambert, N, Bobbin, R et al. (2003) Low-income consumers’ attitudes and behaviour towards access, availability and motivation to eat fruit and vegetables. Public Health Nutr 6, 159168.Google Scholar
36. Walker, RE, Keane, CR & Burke, JG (2010) Disparities and access to healthy food in the United States: a review of food deserts literature. Health Place 16, 876884.Google Scholar
37. Ball, K, Timperio, A & Crawford, D (2009) Neighbourhood socioeconomic inequalities in food access and affordability. Health Place 15, 578585.Google Scholar
38. Jiao, J, Moudon, AV, Ulmer, J et al. (2012) How to identify food deserts: measuring physical and economic access to supermarkets in King County, Washington. Am J Public Health 102, e32e39.Google Scholar
39. Badland, H, Mavoa, S, Villanueva, K et al. (2015) The development of policy-relevant transport indicators to monitor health behaviours and outcomes. J Transport Health 2, 103110.Google Scholar
40. Lee, A, Rainow, S, Tregenza, J et al. (2015) Nutrition in remote Aboriginal communities: lessons from Mai Wiru and the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands. Aust N Z J Public Health 40, Suppl. 1, S81S88.Google Scholar
41. Smith, DM, Cummins, S, Taylor, M et al. (2009) Neighbourhood food environment and area deprivation: spatial accessibility to grocery stores selling fresh fruit and vegetables in urban and rural settings. Int J Epidemiol 39, 2877–284.Google Scholar
42. Saelens, BE, Sallis, JF & Frank, LD (2003) Environmental correlates of walking and cycling: findings from the transportation, urban design, and planning literatures. Ann Behav Med 25, 8091.Google Scholar
43. Christian, H, Knuiman, M, Bull, F et al. (2013) A new urban planning code’s impact on walking: the residential environments project. Am J Public Health 103, 12191228.Google Scholar
44. Harris, E (2009) The role of community gardens in creating healthy communities. Aust Planner 46, 2427.Google Scholar
45. Rundle, A, Neckerman, KM, Freeman, L et al. (2009) Neighborhood food environment and walkability predict obesity in New York City. Environ Health Perspect 117, 442447.Google Scholar
46. Astell-Burt, T & Feng, X (2015) Geographic inequity in healthy food environment and type 2 diabetes: can we please turn off the tap? Med J Aust 203, 246248.Google Scholar
47. Planning Institute of Australia, (2009) Healthy Spaces and Places. Kingston, ACT: Planning Institute of Australia.Google Scholar
48. Heart Foundation (2016) Healthy Active by Design. https://www.heartfoundation.org.au/programs/healthy-active-by-design (accessed August 2018).Google Scholar
49. Dixon, J, Omwega, AM, Friel, S et al. (2007) The health equity dimensions of urban food systems. J Urban Health 84, 118129.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 The Healthy and Equitable Eating (HE2) Framework

Figure 1

Table 2 Policy domains and actions included in the NOURISHING, Healthy Food Environment Policy Index (Food-EPI) and Healthy and Equitable Eating (HE2) frameworks