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Can mobile markets bring fresh food to lower-income neighborhoods in the United States?

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Can mobile markets bring fresh food to lower-income neighborhoods in the United States?
Photo by Ben Maffin / Unsplash

Imagine a neighborhood where fresh fruit and vegetables are hard to find. This project looked at a solution: the Veggie Van, a mobile market bringing produce directly to lower-income communities. The team set up these markets in new locations across the United States to see if this approach could work.

During this twelve-month period, the researchers did not measure health changes like weight loss or blood sugar. Instead, they carefully watched how the program operated. They checked if the van stayed on schedule, how much food was actually given to people, and what local conditions made the program easier or harder to run.

No safety problems were reported because the study was about the process, not testing a drug. While we do not know yet if this van will change health outcomes, the results provide a useful blueprint for other community groups wanting to start similar mobile markets.

What this means for you:
This study offers a practical model for launching mobile food markets in lower-income areas.
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