It’s not that health experts want to deprive kids of foods they like best. They just want to help kids avoid many of the health problems that come with eating large quantities of unhealthful food.
Lower-income and urban neighborhoods, especially those with a large minority population, tend to have many small corner stores and very few supermarkets, points out Dr. Manuel Franco, a food environment researcher.
Research shows that those who live in a neighborhood with a greater availability of small corner stores are more likely to be obese, which raises the risk of diabetes and other diet-related diseases.
Created on Wed Aug 05 12:07:36 EDT 2020
(updated Tue Aug 18 10:36:09 EDT 2020)
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