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      Does Proximity to Fast Food Cause Childhood Obesity? Evidence from Public Housing

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          Abstract

          We examine the causal link between proximity to fast food and the incidence of childhood obesity among low-income households in New York City. Using individual-level longitudinal data on students living in public housing linked to restaurant location data, we exploit the naturally occurring within-development variation in distance to fast food restaurants to estimate the impact of proximity on obesity. Since the assignment of households to specific buildings is based upon availability at the time of assignment to public housing, the distance between student residence and retail outlets—including fast food restaurants, wait-service restaurants, supermarkets, and corner stores—is plausibly random. Our credibly causal estimates suggest that childhood obesity increases with proximity to fast food, with larger effects for younger children who attend neighborhood schools.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          101084730
          28478
          Reg Sci Urban Econ
          Reg Sci Urban Econ
          Regional science and urban economics
          0166-0462
          25 June 2020
          14 June 2020
          September 2020
          01 September 2020
          : 84
          : 103565
          Affiliations
          Syracuse University
          Syracuse University
          New York University
          Author notes

          Author Statement

          Jeehee Han: Conceptualization, Methodology, Data Curation, Writing - Original Draft

          Amy Ellen Schwartz: Conceptualization, Methodology, Supervision, Writing - Review & Editing, Data Curation, Funding Acquisition

          Brian Elbel: Funding Acquisition, Data Curation, Writing - Review & Editing

          [* ]Corresponding author at: Center for Policy Research, Eggers Hall, Maxwell School, Syracuse University, Syracuse NY 13244, United States. jhan09@ 123456syr.edu
          Article
          PMC7375416 PMC7375416 7375416 nihpa1603992
          10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2020.103565
          7375416
          32699458
          baedecc9-3076-4744-93cb-b871e3a73a0b
          History
          Categories
          Article

          L83,urban neighborhoods,food environment,child health and obesity,public housing,R38,I12,J13

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