|
Poor Have Difficulty Eating Healthy Foods
Laurieann Cossey has always struggled with her weight.
Four years ago, she was diagnosed with diabetes. Now, six months
pregnant and struggling to get by, the single mother tries to
make sure her 1-year-old son gets the fruits and vegetables he
needs.
"I worry a lot about my son being obese," said Cossey, whose
mother and grandmother also had diabetes.
Cossey, a 43-year-old community college student, and her son,
Andrew, survive on food stamps, trips to the food bank, and a
state program for pregnant women and their children that provides
essentials such as dairy products, fruit juice and cereal.
She knows they should both be eating more fruits and vegetables.
But the foods on the government's new food pyramid are too expensive.
Boxed macaroni and cheese costs less than a dollar to feed the
whole family; a fresh chicken breast and steamed vegetables cost
about $2.60.
"I'm sure we'd all like to feed our children a nice healthy
chicken breast and asparagus," she said on a visit to a vegetable
market. "If we are low on fruits and vegetables, my child gets
his first."
But pasta, canned vegetables and hamburger are much more likely
to be on Cossey's table.
Scientists, doctors and government officials are working on
ways to get families like Cossey's to eat healthier food. Some
innovative new programs are making progress, but the results
are not coming fast enough as Americans get fatter and fatter.
The poor have more barriers to dealing with obesity, eating
healthy and leading an active life, said Dr. Lydia Tinajero-Deck
said.
Fast food restaurants are more common in their neighborhoods
than fresh produce markets. Many parents, sometimes working two
jobs, don't have the time to cook healthy meals. And fresh food
is more costly.
"Energy-dense foods rich in starch, sugar or fat are the cheapest
option for the consumer," said Adam Drewnowski, director of the
Center for Public Health Nutrition at the University of Washington. "As
long as the healthier lean meats, fish and fresh produce are
more expensive, obesity will continue to be a problem for the
working poor."
Dr. David L. Katz of Yale-Griffin Prevention Research Center
advocates vegetable subsidies. He favors the idea of a junk food
tax that would use the money to lower the price of vegetables,
as well as pay for anti-obesity programs.
Diana Crane, a spokeswoman for PCC Natural Markets in Seattle,
argues that educated consumers can still find fresh food bargains. "Many
types of produce remain very affordable, such as potatoes and
many greens, many under $1 per pound," she said.
Crane said PCC would be happy to see more funding for government
programs that get produce to low-income families.
Drewnowski is working with a number of local agencies across
Washington state to promote healthy eating and exercise by offering
grants for promising projects.
He also argues for research to map the geographical distribution
of obesity rates and spoke about obesity by ZIP code at a conference
over the summer. An "atlas of obesity" would help policymakers
know where to focus their programs, he said.
Some areas are already battling obesity on a geographic basis.
In Moses Lake, a rural town in eastern Washington with a high
incidence of poverty, community agencies are working with citizen
volunteers to improve walking trails; a community garden is giving
residents a place to grow their own fruits and vegetables.
Drewnowski says most diet trend and health suggestions are designed
for the middle class. A study his group is conducting seeks ways
to make healthy eating more affordable.
"We have enough information about which foods are healthy and
which are not. But affordability and access — that's a different
story," he said.
Reference
Source 102
September
27,
2005
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|