
- A food desert is a district with little or no access to healthy foods. They are usually found in urban environments, but occasionally can be in rural places.
- Most food deserts are areas with extremely high poverty rates. The people living there can’t afford to buy the foods that are needed to maintain a healthy diet, like fruits and vegetables.
- About 2.3 million people live more than one mile away from a supermarket and don’t own a car.
- Supermarkets are sparse in food deserts, and the products found there are usually not fresh, organic, or healthy.
- Food deserts result in sky-rocketing obesity rates, because of the lack healthful, affordable food.
- With no other options, people living in food deserts get most of their meals from fast food restaurants.
- Activists like Michelle Obama and Mari Gallagher have taken on the challenge of wiping out food deserts.
- Over the past 5 years, food deserts have been decreased by almost 40%.
- You can find food deserts near you with the USDA’s new food desert locater map [1].
- The death rate from diabetes in a food desert is twice that of areas with access to grocery stores.
- White neighborhoods have an average of 4 times as many supermarkets as predominantly black and Hispanic areas do.
Start an awareness campaign [2] about this issue. GO [2]
Sources:
USDA [1]