The Seattle Obesity Study (S.O.S) seeks to explain why obesity rates are more prevalent among some racial/ethnic minorities, population subgroups of lower education and incomes, and in high-poverty areas. The study will recruit a longitudinal cohort of 400 male and female adults, ages 21-65y, and resident in Seattle-King County and stratified by income and race/ethnicity, using an address-based sampling scheme. Data on food seeking behavior will be collected using a combination of self report and objective measures. At the first in- person interview, participants will complete a behavior survey module on food shopping and dietary habits, estimated food expenditures, nutrition literacy, attitudes towards diet and health, demographics, and health status. Health-related questions will address obesity, diabetes, stress, and cardiovascular disease. Height, weight, and waist circumference will be measured. A GPS receiver with data logging capability will be used to track the participants'movements and to record the time and location of all food-related events for 1 wk. Food store and restaurant receipts, stamped with time and date, will be collected for 4 wks. Foods brought into the home will be scanned with a portable UPC scanner for 4 wks. Three 24-h food recalls will be administered by phone in wks 3 and 4, and food frequency questionnaires will be administered in week 4 of data collection. To be able to establish causality between environmental and dietary variables and health outcomes, the behavior survey module and the food frequency questionnaire will be re-administered during a follow up visit 18 months later and anthropometric measures will be collected for the second time. Data on foods purchased for use at home and foods consumed away from home will be linked to individual-level metrics of the built environment based on tax parcel data. The main aim of the study is to assess the impact of SEP, environmental, and dietary variables on obesity and body weight gain. The hypothesis is that low dietary quality and low diet cost will be associated with prevalent obesity and will predict 18 mo. weight gain, adjusting for SEP. This model will be built on data collected and validated under Aims 2 and 3.
The second aim will be to assess how access to food sources (both physical and economic), retail outlet choice, and food purchases impact diet quality across SEP strata. The hypothesis is that diet quality will be influenced strongly by price and other economic variables than by proximity to food sources.
The third aim will be to validate self-reported data on food acquisition and expenditures against objective measures of individual behavior in space and time. The hypothesis is that objective measures of food purchase behaviors based on GPS logs, food store and restaurant receipts, and UPC scanner data will provide new insights into the energy and nutrient content of foods that are acquired at different locations. Study results have the potential of informing local and national policies on improving retail access to affordable healthy foods by vulnerable groups.

Public Health Relevance

A better understanding of factors that may explain social disparities in diet quality and chronic diseases is critical. The proposed longitudinal study seeks to explain the role of built environment, economics, psychosocial factors, SEP and demographics on food seeking behaviors, diet quality, obesity and body weight gain. This interdisciplinary project on the built environment, behavior and health brings together experts from nutrition, geography, epidemiology, medicine, statistics and urban design.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DK076608-06
Application #
8426178
Study Section
Community-Level Health Promotion Study Section (CLHP)
Program Officer
Kuczmarski, Robert J
Project Start
2007-01-01
Project End
2015-02-28
Budget Start
2013-03-01
Budget End
2014-02-28
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$479,666
Indirect Cost
$87,917
Name
University of Washington
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
605799469
City
Seattle
State
WA
Country
United States
Zip Code
98195
Spoden, Amanda L; Buszkiewicz, James H; Drewnowski, Adam et al. (2018) Seattle's minimum wage ordinance did not affect supermarket food prices by food processing category. Public Health Nutr 21:1762-1770
Drewnowski, A; Buszkiewicz, J; Aggarwal, A et al. (2018) A new method to visualize obesity prevalence in Seattle-King County at the census block level. Obes Sci Pract 4:14-19
Quistberg, D Alex; Howard, Eric J; Hurvitz, Philip M et al. (2017) The Relationship Between Objectively Measured Walking and Risk of Pedestrian-Motor Vehicle Collision. Am J Epidemiol 185:810-821
Schwartz, Michael W; Seeley, Randy J; Zeltser, Lori M et al. (2017) Obesity Pathogenesis: An Endocrine Society Scientific Statement. Endocr Rev 38:267-296
Otten, Jennifer J; Buszkiewicz, James; Tang, Wesley et al. (2017) The Impact of a City-Level Minimum-Wage Policy on Supermarket Food Prices in Seattle-King County. Int J Environ Res Public Health 14:
Tiwari, Arpita; Aggarwal, Anju; Tang, Wesley et al. (2017) Cooking at Home: A Strategy to Comply With U.S. Dietary Guidelines at No Extra Cost. Am J Prev Med 52:616-624
Drewnowski, Adam; Aggarwal, Anju; Tang, Wesley et al. (2016) Obesity, diet quality, physical activity, and the built environment: the need for behavioral pathways. BMC Public Health 16:1153
Aggarwal, Anju; Rehm, Colin D; Monsivais, Pablo et al. (2016) Importance of taste, nutrition, cost and convenience in relation to diet quality: Evidence of nutrition resilience among US adults using National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2007-2010. Prev Med 90:184-92
Tang, Wesley; Aggarwal, Anju; Moudon, Anne Vernez et al. (2016) Self-reported and measured weights and heights among adults in Seattle and King County. BMC Obes 3:11
Tang, W; Aggarwal, A; Liu, Z et al. (2016) Validating self-reported food expenditures against food store and eating-out receipts. Eur J Clin Nutr 70:352-7

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