2016
DOI: 10.2196/resprot.5303
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The Good Food Junction: a Community-Based Food Store Intervention to Address Nutritional Health Inequities

Abstract: BackgroundThis is a 2-year study to assess the early impacts of a new grocery store intervention in a former food desert.ObjectiveThe purpose of the study is to understand the early health effects of the introduction of a large-scale food and nutrition-focused community-based population health intervention, the Good Food Junction (GFJ) Cooperative Store, in a geographically bounded group of socially disadvantaged neighborhoods (the “core neighborhoods”) in a midsized Canadian city. The GFJ grocery store was ta… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…The nine remaining articles reported on six different failed grocery stores and are listed along with their stated reasons for closure in Table 2. Examples were found from Brooklyn, New York (Morland, 2010); Flint, Michigan (Sadler, Gilliland, & Arku, 2013); Hartford, Connecticut (Haar, 2011); Richmond, Virginia (Gilligan, 2004); Syracuse, New York (Weaver, 2017, 2018); and Saskatoon, Saskatchewan (Engler-Stringer et al, 2016; Fitzpatrick, 2016).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The nine remaining articles reported on six different failed grocery stores and are listed along with their stated reasons for closure in Table 2. Examples were found from Brooklyn, New York (Morland, 2010); Flint, Michigan (Sadler, Gilliland, & Arku, 2013); Hartford, Connecticut (Haar, 2011); Richmond, Virginia (Gilligan, 2004); Syracuse, New York (Weaver, 2017, 2018); and Saskatoon, Saskatchewan (Engler-Stringer et al, 2016; Fitzpatrick, 2016).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The impact on fruit and vegetable intake among children or on other outcomes relevant to dietary behaviour or chronic disease prevention remains unknown. Many articles that were considered for (42,43) or included in the present review (20)(21)(22)(23) , or have been published since (44)(45)(46) , assessed other outcomes of interest, including area-level access to healthy foods, change in other dietary behaviours (e.g. change in total energy intake, dietary quality, consumption of specific food groups) or BMI.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Data collection for the cross-sectional household food procurement survey occurred between July and November 2013. A detailed description of the survey, as well as the complete study protocol, has been published elsewhere (Engler-Stringer et al, 2016). Surveys took between 5 and 20 minutes (average 15 minutes) to complete, and participants were given a $10.00 gift certificate for participating.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A yearlong longitudinal study was conducted to record potential changes in perceived health status among GFJ shoppers. The survey and participant eligibility criteria are detailed elsewhere (Engler-Stringer et al, 2016). The surveys took an average of 45 minutes to complete.…”
Section: Data Collection Procedures Study 2: Longitudinal Health Andmentioning
confidence: 99%
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