Skip to main content

Food environments and health

Guest Editors

Camila Corvalán, MD, MPH, PhD, University of Chile, Chile
Jasmine Fledderjohann
, PhD, Lancaster University, UK
Marisa Miraldo, PhD, Imperial College Business School, UK
Paraskevi Seferidi, PhD, Imperial College London, UK


BMC Medicine called for submissions to our Collection on food environments and their impact on public health. This Collection seeks to highlight the physical, economic, social, and cultural contexts in which individuals make choices about what to eat, including the availability of healthy and unhealthy foods, the influence of marketing and advertising, as well as the impact of policies and regulations related to food production and distribution. By deepening our understanding of food environments’ impacts on dietary choices and health outcomes, we seek to support SDG 2's mission of achieving food security, improving nutrition, and promoting sustainable agriculture.

New Content ItemThis Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 2: Zero Hunger.

Meet the Guest Editors

Back to top

Camila Corvalán, MD, MPH, PhD, University of Chile, Chile

Dr Camila Corvalán is a full professor at the Institute of Nutrition and Food Technology (INTA) where she coordinates the Center for Research in Food Environments and Nutrition-related Chronic Diseases (CIAPEC). Her research focusses on understanding food environment and its relation to the early origins of obesity and dietary behaviors with an implementation research focus. Currently, she coordinates the INFORMAS food environment platform in Chile and leads the evaluation of the Chilean Food Labelling and Marketing Law, among other food environment policies.

Jasmine Fledderjohann, PhD, Lancaster University, UK

Dr Jasmine Fledderjohann is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Lancaster University. She holds a dual-title PhD in Sociology and Demography from the Pennsylvania State University. She was a postdoctoral fellow in Sociology at the University of Oxford before joining Lancaster in 2016. Since 2020, she has been leading the Food Security for Equitable Futures project, a UKRI funded Future Leaders Fellowship examining the consequences and measurement of food insecurity in Global Majority countries. She is a mixed-methods researcher with research interests in social inequities, including the social causes and consequences of food insecurity, reproductive justice, and social justice in the design and application of digital technology.

Marisa Miraldo, PhD, Imperial College Business School, UK

Marisa Miraldo is Professor of Health Economics in the Department of Economics and Public Policy at Imperial College Business School. She is Academic Director of the MSc in International Health Management. Marisa’s expertise is on behavioral interventions to promote health and wellbeing and the economics and policy of healthcare innovation. She has a track record of leading interdisciplinary research and currently leads several international projects including: the primary prevention workstream of the Global Health Research Unit (GHRU) on Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease in South Asians, where she leads behavioral change interventions to promote better diets; the workstream on behavioral change interventions within the Jameel Institute-Kenneth C. Griffin Initiative for the Economics of Pandemic Preparedness (EPPI); and the workstream on Incentives for Innovation and Equitable access to Innovation within the Hi-Prix Consortia.

Paraskevi Seferidi, PhD, Imperial College London, UK

Dr Seferidi is a Research Fellow at the School of Public Health, Imperial College London. She has a background in nutrition and public health and her research focuses on food systems and food policy, with a specific interest in food system sustainability and systems thinking methods. She holds a MRC Career Development Award that focuses on investigating the complex interconnections between climate change and the double burden of malnutrition, globally and more specifically in Peru, and identifying opportunities for triple-duty actions that concurrently target climate change, overnutrition, and undernutrition.

About the collection

BMC Medicine is calling for submissions to our Collection on food environments and their impact on public health.

Nearly 70% of all deaths worldwide are attributed to non-communicable diseases, which are closely linked to diet and lifestyle. It is estimated that more than 41 million children under the age of five and 1.9 billion adults suffer from obesity, which is now increasingly a problem in low- and middle-income countries. Additionally, in 2022, globally, 148.1 million children under the age of 5 years of age were classified as stunted, and 45 million as wasted. Given these statistics, it is crucial to deepen our understanding of the food environments that people must navigate daily.

This Collection seeks to highlight the physical, economic, social, and cultural contexts in which individuals make choices about what to eat, including the availability of healthy and unhealthy foods, the influence of marketing and advertising, as well as the impact of policies and regulations related to food production and distribution. By deepening our understanding of food environments’ impacts on dietary choices and health outcomes, we seek to support SDG 2's mission of achieving food security, improving nutrition, and promoting sustainable agriculture.

We invite contributions that explore topics including, but not limited to, the following:

Nutritional epidemiology and food consumption patterns: Evaluate the influence of cultural, socioeconomic, and geographic factors on dietary habits and their impact on health and inequalities.

Food accessibility and security: Explore the impact of food deserts and food swamps on communities, as well as the role of policy, supply chains, migration, rural land use changes, and urban planning in shaping food environments. Document who is at risk of food insecurity, where, and with what social and biological consequences.

Food marketing and its effects: Analyze the impact of food advertising, especially on children and vulnerable populations, and identify potential regulatory and behavioral interventions to mitigate the adverse effects of marketing.

Food sustainability and health: Examine the environmental and health implications of food consumption, production, and distribution and assess the feasibility and impact of sustainable diets. Additionally, explore the impact of climate change on food environments, including food security, availability, affordability, and quality.

Interventions and policy initiatives: Evaluate the effectiveness of various strategies, such as behavioral interventions, social policies, trade and agricultural policies, taxation, and labeling, in improving food environments and reducing food insecurity.

Food technology and innovation: Explore the impact of food processing, fortification, and new technologies on nutrition and health.

Behavioral science approaches for better diets: Examine decision-making, food preferences, and interventions designed to promote healthier choices based on environmental cues and individual perceptions.

Systems science approaches to better nutrition: Analyze the interconnected components of food systems, helping identify how changes in one part affect the whole, offering insights for systemic interventions that can improve nutrition.

The role of the built environment on nutrition and health: Explore the built environment's impact on nutrition and health, including food accessibility and physical surroundings.

All manuscripts submitted to this journal, including those submitted to collections and special issues, are assessed in line with our editorial policies and the journal’s peer review process. Reviewers and editors are required to declare competing interests and can be excluded from the peer review process if a competing interest exists.

  1. Significant advancements in treatment and care, as well as early detection, have contributed to an increase in cancer survival rates. Recently, the EAT-Lancet Commission on Food, Planet, Health proposed the “p...

    Authors: Nena Karavasiloglou, Alysha S. Thompson, Giulia Pestoni, Flurina Suter, Keren Papier, Aedín Cassidy, Tilman Kühn and Sabine Rohrmann
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:286
  2. Motorway food environments are dominated by roadside restaurants and petrol station stores offering predominantly unhealthy quick-service meals and foods for on-the-go consumption. Improving these environments...

    Authors: Lisanne Geboers, Coosje Dijkstra, Frédérique C. Rongen, Sanne K. Djojosoeparto and Maartje P. Poelman
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:279
  3. Disparities in neighborhood food environments in the United States, attributed to numerous complex economic, social, and political factors, likely to contribute to disparities in access to healthy food and cog...

    Authors: Boeun Kim, Roland J. Thorpe Jr, Sarah L. Szanton, Paris B. Adkins-Jackson and Laura J. Samuel
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:259
  4. To better inform retail food environment policies in the global south, it is necessary to further understand the healthfulness of food and beverages purchased by type of food outlet over time.

    Authors: Ana Paula Domínguez-Barreto, Irene Farah, Nancy López-Olmedo, Carolina Pérez-Ferrer, Yenisei Ramírez-Toscano, Brent A. Langellier, M. Arantxa Colchero, Juan A. Rivera-Dommarco, Tonatiuh Barrientos-Gutiérrez and Dalia Stern
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:205
  5. Longitudinal cohort studies across the lifespan suggest an association between ultra-processed food (UPF) and depression. However, the effect of UPF on depression and mental health in older adults has not been...

    Authors: Belayneh Mengist, Mojtaba Lotfaliany, Julie A. Pasco, Bruno Agustini, Michael Berk, Malcolm Forbes, Melissa M. Lane, Suzanne G. Orchard, Joanne Ryan, Alice J. Owen, Robyn L. Woods, John J. McNeil and Mohammadreza Mohebbi
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:172
  6. Obesity and obesity-related cancers contribute to rising healthcare costs and declining life expectancy in the US and improving diet quality plays a crucial role in reversing such trends. Existing studies on t...

    Authors: Qinyun Lin, Xiang Chen, Xukun Xiang, Weixuan Lyu, Congcong Miao, Gaofei Zhang and Ran Xu
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:167
  7. Communicating (dynamic) social norms is considered a promising tool to stimulate healthy and sustainable food choices. The aim of the present study was to evaluate to what extent a (dynamic) social norm interv...

    Authors: Sofia M. M. Wolfswinkel, Sanne Raghoebar, Josine M. Stuber, Emely de Vet and Maartje P. Poelman
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:150
  8. Processed packaged foods are readily available in Fiji; however, the extent to which ultra-processed foods (UPFs) currently contribute to energy and nutrient intake is unknown. This study aimed to assess the c...

    Authors: Aliyah Palu, Joseph Alvin Santos, Daisy Coyle, Maria Shahid, Juliette Crowther, Gade Waqa, Colin Bell, Jacqui Webster and Briar McKenzie
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:109
  9. Appropriate complementary feeding practices (CFPs) play a key role for ensuring optimal health, growth and development for children 6–23 months. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence and as...

    Authors: Thuy Ngoc Vuong and Hang Thi Diem Tran
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:100
  10. Chile’s Food Labelling Law was implemented in three phases with increasingly stricter limits. After initial implementation, sugars and sodium decreased in packaged foods, with no significant changes for satura...

    Authors: Natalia Rebolledo, Pedro Ferrer-Rosende, Marcela Reyes, Lindsey Smith Taillie and Camila Corvalán
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:46
  11. Hospitals fulfill an important exemplary role in promoting health and well-being. It is therefore crucial to have a supportive food environment that stimulates healthy and sustainable food choices of patients,...

    Authors: Joline J. Wierda, Femke van Nassau, Sanne K. Djojosoeparto and Maartje P. Poelman
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:45
  12. Dutch adolescents predominantly purchase unhealthy snacks in supermarkets, which negatively influence their health. The aim of this study was to investigate the short- and longer-term effects of a nutrition pe...

    Authors: Marlijn Huitink, Maartje P. Poelman, Jacob C. Seidell, Jos W. R. Twisk and S. Coosje Dijkstra
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:14
  13. Over the past decades, the prevalence of obesity among adults has rapidly increased, particularly in socioeconomically deprived urban neighbourhoods. To better understand the complex mechanisms behind this tre...

    Authors: Fleur ter Ellen, Joost Oude Groeniger, Karien Stronks, Luc L. Hagenaars, Carlijn B.M. Kamphuis, Joreintje D. Mackenbach, Mariëlle A. Beenackers, Karen Freijer, Pieter Coenen, Maartje Poelman, Karen M. Oude Hengel and Frank J. van Lenthe
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2025 23:2
  14. Unhealthy visual food cues in outdoor public spaces are external drivers of unhealthy diets. Food cues are visible situations associated with food-related memories. This study aimed to gain insight into the (u...

    Authors: Tamika M. Wopereis, Sanne K. Djojosoeparto, Frédérique C. Rongen, Sanne C. Peeters, Emely de Vet and Maartje P. Poelman
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:602
  15. In England, the number of takeaway food outlets (‘takeaways’) has been increasing for over two decades. Takeaway management zones around schools are an effective way to restrict the growth of new takeaways but...

    Authors: Nina Trivedy Rogers, Ben Amies-Cull, Jean Adams, Michael Chang, Steven Cummins, Daniel Derbyshire, Suzan Hassan, Matthew Keeble, Bochu Liu, Antonieta Medina-Lara, Bea Savory, John Rahilly, Richard Smith, Claire Thompson, Martin White, Oliver Mytton…
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:545
  16. Online food delivery (OFD) platforms offer easy access to an abundance of energy-dense and nutrient-poor takeaway foods and may exacerbate existing unhealthy food environments. Efforts to improve population di...

    Authors: Si Si Jia, Allyson R. Todd, Lana Vanderlee, Penny Farrell, Margaret Allman-Farinelli, Gary Sacks, Alice A. Gibson and Stephanie R. Partridge
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:542
  17. Front-of-pack (FOP) warning labels have demonstrated effectiveness for reducing sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption and switching to water. However, an unintended consequence is that they may also incre...

    Authors: Caroline Miller, Enola Kay, Joanne Dono and Kerry Ettridge
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:541
  18. As part of the UK government’s obesity strategy, the Food (Promotion and Placement) (England) Regulations 2021 were implemented in October 2022 to restrict the prominent placement of products high in fat, suga...

    Authors: Preeti Dhuria, Sarah Muir, Sarah Jenner, Emma Roe, Wendy Lawrence, Janis Baird and Christina Vogel
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:514
  19. The role of plant-based dietary patterns in preventing cardiovascular disease (CVD) among individuals with prediabetes and diabetes remains unclear. We aimed to evaluate the associations of plant-based diet in...

    Authors: Pan Zhuang, Fenglei Wang, Jianxin Yao, Xiaohui Liu, Yin Li, Yang Ao, Hao Ye, Xuzhi Wan, Yu Zhang and Jingjing Jiao
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:485
  20. A voluntary National Healthy Food and Drink Policy (the Policy) was introduced in public hospitals in New Zealand in 2016. This study assessed the changes in implementation of the Policy and its impact on prov...

    Authors: Sally Mackay, Magda Rosin, Bruce Kidd, Sarah Gerritsen, Stephanie Shen, Yannan Jiang, Lisa Te Morenga and Cliona Ni Mhurchu
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:437
  21. Very few studies to date investigated the prospective association of changes in exposure to the food environment with cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. We aim to explore if time-varying exposure to the food e...

    Authors: Maria Gabriela M. Pinho, Yvonne Koop, Joreintje D. Mackenbach, Jeroen Lakerveld, Mariana Simões, Roel Vermeulen, Alfred J. Wagtendonk, Ilonca Vaartjes and Joline W. J. Beulens
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:427
  22. The Medium and Long-Term Plan for the Prevention and Treatment of Chronic Diseases (2017–2025) in China has highlighted the importance of reducing fat, sodium, and sugar in foods. However, front-of-pack labeli...

    Authors: Feiyan Wu, Yulong Qin, Dan Hou, Sasa Xie, Guanchao Zhang, Dexing Zhang and Min Yang
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:402
  23. Ongoing conflict between multiple armed groups, including pastoralist herders in the Central African Republic (CAR) causes frequent population displacements, food insecurity and scarcity of healthcare services...

    Authors: Nicola Stambach, Helen Lambert, Katie Eves, Blaise Alenwi Nfornuh, Emily Bowler, Peter Williams, Marcel Lama, Pascal Bakamba and Richard Allan
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:380
  24. Dietary risk factors are the leading cause of death globally and in New Zealand (NZ). Processed packaged foods are prevalent in the food supply and contribute excess amounts of sodium, saturated fat, and sugar...

    Authors: Leanne Young, Bruce Kidd, Stephanie Shen, Yannan Jiang, Helen Eyles, Josephine Marshall, Sally Schultz, Jasmine Chan, Gary Sacks and Cliona Ni Mhurchu
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:372
  25. Prominent product placement is a core promotional tactic in retail food environments. How this practice has been adapted for online supermarkets, and the extent to which it is applied to healthier and less hea...

    Authors: Damian Maganja, Madeleine de Carle, Tazman Davies, Clara Gómez Donoso, Tailane Scapin, Adrian J. Cameron, Jimmy C. Y. Louie, Mark D. Huffman, Kathy Trieu and Jason H. Y. Wu
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:341
  26. Increasing consumption of ultra-processed foods (UPF) has been identified as a risk factor for obesity and various diseases, primarily in adults. Nonetheless, research in children is limited, especially regard...

    Authors: Camila Zancheta, Natalia Rebolledo, Lindsey Smith Taillie, Marcela Reyes and Camila Corvalán
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:340
  27. Dietary guidelines recommend a shift to plant-based diets. Fortified soymilk, a prototypical plant protein food used in the transition to plant-based diets, usually contains added sugars to match the sweetness...

    Authors: M. N. Erlich, D. Ghidanac, S. Blanco Mejia, T. A. Khan, L. Chiavaroli, A. Zurbau, S. Ayoub-Charette, A. Almneni, M. Messina, L. A. Leiter, R. P. Bazinet, D. J. A. Jenkins, C. W. C. Kendall and J. L. Sievenpiper
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:336
  28. Geroscience focuses on interventions to mitigate molecular changes associated with aging. Lifestyle modifications, medications, and social factors influence the aging process, yet the complex molecular mechani...

    Authors: Varun B. Dwaraka, Lucia Aronica, Natalia Carreras-Gallo, Jennifer L. Robinson, Tayler Hennings, Matthew M. Carter, Michael J. Corley, Aaron Lin, Logan Turner, Ryan Smith, Tavis L. Mendez, Hannah Went, Emily R. Ebel, Erica D. Sonnenburg, Justin L. Sonnenburg and Christopher D. Gardner
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:301
  29. Despite the many benefits of school meals, not all students participate. One reason students may not participate in school meals is because they instead purchase breakfast or lunch from food outlets located ar...

    Authors: Emily M. Melnick, Francesco Acciai, Michael J. Yedidia and Punam Ohri-Vachaspati
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:287
  30. Healthy Start (HS) is a government scheme in England, Wales and Northern Ireland that offers a financial payment card and free vitamins to families experiencing low income. Pregnant women and families with chi...

    Authors: Millie Barrett, Mark Spires and Christina Vogel
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:177
  31. Context-specific interventions may contribute to sustained behaviour change and improved health outcomes. We evaluated the real-world effects of supermarket nudging and pricing strategies and mobile physical a...

    Authors: Josine M. Stuber, Joreintje D. Mackenbach, Gert-Jan de Bruijn, Marleen Gillebaart, Jody C. Hoenink, Cédric N. H. Middel, Denise T. D. de Ridder, Yvonne T. van der Schouw, Edith G. Smit, Elizabeth Velema, Anne L. Vos, Wilma E. Waterlander, Jeroen Lakerveld and Joline W. J. Beulens
    Citation: BMC Medicine 2024 22:52

    The Commentary to this article has been published in BMC Medicine 2024 22:87

Submission Guidelines

Back to top

BMC Medicine encourages submissions of front matter articles and original research, including clinical trials (phase I-III, randomized-controlled, either positive or negative trials), epidemiological studies (retrospective or prospective), systematic reviews and meta-analyses, -omics, medical imaging, genomics studies and biomarkers research. Before submitting your manuscript, please ensure you have read our submission guidelines

To submit your manuscript to this Collection, please use our online submission system and indicate in your covering letter that you would like the article to be considered for inclusion in the "Food environments and health" Collection.

All articles submitted to Collections are peer-reviewed in line with the journal’s standard peer-review policy and are subject to all of the journal’s standard editorial and publishing policies. This includes the journal’s policy on competing interests. 

The Guest Editors have no competing interests with the submissions which they handle through the peer review process. The peer review of any submissions for which the Guest Editors have competing interests is handled by another Editor or Editorial Board Member who has no competing interests.