HEALTH NEWS AND NOTESCrossing |
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(NAPSI)-When First Lady Michelle Obama announced her Let's Move campaign to fight child obesity, she noted that many families live in "food deserts": places where residents may not be able to get to a supermarket easily because they do not own a car, have access to public transportation or live along walkable roads. A Solution Researchers at the nation's "For many people, nontraditional food stores, such as convenience stores or the 'dollar store,' are the neighborhood supermarket," says Joseph Sharkey, PhD, MPH, RD, a researcher at the Texas A&M University PRC in College Station--about 100 miles east of Austin. Dr. Sharkey and other PRC researchers spent more than a year driving the rural roads in eight counties in the Brazos Valley and along the Texas-Mexico border, mapping the places where people bought food and learning how the residents shopped at convenience stores, discount stores, pharmacies, flea markets and even front-yard or mobile food stands. Needed: Community Participation Making healthy foods available at small stores often requires cooperation
between the shop owners and the entire community. Store owners may try to
offer produce, says Diego Rose, PhD, MPH, director of the Tulane University
PRC in "We need to see if we can reset this supply-and-demand relationship
at a healthier level," says Dr. Rose. In post-Katrina The Power of Change Neighborhood improvements can help residents feel good about their communities
and their lives, so they are more willing to try a healthy diet, adds Jessica
Kelley-Moore, PhD, from the PRC at "People start feeling that something is afoot and they want to be a part of that change," she says. The Cleveland PRC is working to increase school and community gardening programs, which help people grow healthy food and may make them want to buy more of it. The PRC researchers are also working with corner stores, sharing successful strategies on selling healthy foods and even hosting cooking demonstrations--which surprised some shoppers, who said they thought such events only happened at fancy shops in affluent neighborhoods. "We are telling residents that they are important people and that a good diet is important to staying healthy," says Dr. Kelley-Moore. "When you communicate that, residents jump in 100 percent." For more information about the CDC's PRC network and research, see www.cdc.gov/prc. |
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