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Why Obesity and Heart Disease Hit Harder in Indian Country [PSMag.com]

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The Navajo Nation covers 27,413 square miles. Serving that entire area, the territory has just 10 grocery stores. This means that, in order to get fresh, affordable produce, some Navajo Nation residents must drive at least 155 miles round-trip, according to one recent study.

This makes the Navajo Nation, like many other American Indian reservations, a food desertβ€”a region in the United States where residents can't easily buy fresh, healthy, affordable food. (Because of their setting, these food deserts are unlike those that normally show up in the news, which tend to be in urban centers.) In recent years, American public health researchers and policy experts have done a lot to document the effects of food deserts on people's health, and to suggest solutions. Yet, in all that talk, nothing quite seemed like it would work for the people Crystal Echohawk and Janie Simms Hipp serve. "The policy levers were off," Hipp says. "They were not a good fit because of the uniqueness of Indian Country."

 

[For more of this story, written by Francie Diep, go to http://www.psmag.com/health-an...n-indian-food-desert]

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