Abstract
This paper is a mixed-method, in-depth study of how poor adults in a rural Pennsylvania community experience their environment as a food desert. Open-ended interviews and questionnaires were used to determine food purchasing and consumption practices as well as some of the health issues that individuals experienced. The open-ended format allowed participants to identify multiple factors influencing food access—transportation, inadequate social service information and benefits, terrain, inadequate education about food and nutrition, and cost. The study used an ecological framework to analyze the complex interaction of multiple systems influencing participants’ access to healthy food. Though our sample was small (11 participants), the narratives provided deeper understanding of the realities confronting poor rural adults in their quest for healthy diets. The paper considers implications for health and overall quality of life of the rural poor and suggests that larger-scale, in-depth studies are needed to more fully understand their predicament and craft better policies to address them.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to acknowledge the people whose infinite support made this paper possible. In particular, they thank Dr. Peter R. Grahame for his comments on this and earlier drafts of this paper. They thank Rebecca Goodall for her editorial assistance on this paper. They would also like to acknowledge Chiara Sabina and Bernadette Lear for their contributions in bringing this research to light.