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Fat Tuesday! Food Deserts

From NPR.

There's More to Fixing Food Deserts than Building Grocery Stores 

There has been a lot of talk about what's wrong with food deserts. First lady Michelle Obama, for one, says far too many people can't access the fruits and vegetables they need to be healthy. Last year, she helped persuade several major retailers, foundations and small businesses to bring more healthful food to neighborhoods where supermarkets are scarce.

But researchers are finding that it's more complicated than "if you build it, they will come." A study finds that shoppers don't just care about cost and proximity to fresh produce ? they also need choice and quality if they're going to buy it.

"Simply providing fruits and vegetables may not be enough if [they] don't meet the expectations of those people who are supposed to buy them," Jonathan Blitstein, a research psychologist at Research Triangle Institute and lead author of the paper, tells The Salt.

In other words, low-income shoppers dislike wilted lettuce just as much as anyone else. Not shocking.

The study, which recently appeared in the journal Public Health Nutrition, used data from 495 people in six low-income Chicago neighborhoods. Participants were asked whether the place they shopped for fruits and vegetables was convenient, whether that place provided a good selection and whether they thought the fruits and vegetables were high quality.

The researchers found that the answers were closely related to what people ate. "People who had higher ratings for the places they usually shop for fruits and vegetables had greater intake [of produce]," says Blitstein. "[That finding] held across all different types of people, different age groups, ethnicity groups, men and women and regardless of people had greater economic need."

The study is "part of a growing body of evidence that the environment is important in terms of promoting good eating," says Shannon Zenk, a health systems scientist at the University of Illinois at Chicago, who also studies how environment affects health in Chicago neighborhoods.

Zenk says that what can also turn people off from shopping for healthful food is a "lack of safety or cleanliness, poor customer service or treatment of customers, including racial profiling" at food stores.

Both Zenk and Blitstein say that except for their budgets, there is no difference between what low-income consumers and higher-earning consumers are looking for.

Still, Zenk says that there's no one-size-fits-all solution to increasing fruit and vegetable intake. That's why community members need to be at the table when public health experts try to get more healthful food into them.

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Re: Fat Tuesday! Food Deserts

  • I read Food DesSerts and then the wilted lettuce made me really confused and sad.
    Can't find me on the nest anymore.

    Find me here instead!
  • If I ever start an emo band, I'm definitely naming it Wilted Lettuce Made Me Confused and Sad.
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  • imageY4M:
    I read Food DesSerts and then the wilted lettuce made me really confused and sad.

    I did too. I thought the fumes were getting to me.

    Team Basement Cat imageKnitting&Kitties
  • Seriously.  Food Desserts makes sense up until the 4th paragraph and then you hit a wall like "whoa, wilted lettuce, I don't think I'm reading about dessert right now"

    Or maybe that's just me. 

    Can't find me on the nest anymore.

    Find me here instead!
  • My first thought when I read the title of the post was, silly bridey, of course desserts are made of food.
  • I also read this as "food desSerts" and expected to find photos like this:

    Cupcake burger:

    image

    Sushi cakes:

    image

    Asparagus cake (seasonally appropriate!):

    image

    Popcorn cake pops:

    image

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  • I didn't even open the post for hours because I read "Food Desserts," which, of course, makes no sense.

    Anyway, this article (once I finally read it), was interesting to me because (1) I live in a food desert, and (2) before it closed in November, the only store we had near us--an Albertson's-- was unshoppable except in extreme emergencies because of the rotten produce, sketchy meat, way-past-expiration date food, and general filth.  Albertson's naturally claimed that it closed the store for "underperformance," and the local paper mentioned that Albertson's couldn't be expected to perfom well in this neighborhood because their prices are on the higher end (not Whole Foods high, but high-ish).  However, Safeway--which is easily as expensive or more expensive than Albertsons-- has two stores within a few miles of the now-closed Albertsons that are thriving.  Those stores are clean and well-stocked.

    Go figure. 

    In case you're wondering where everyone went: http://pandce.proboards.com/index.cgi
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