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Higgins: $3.1M for UB project examining use of mobile produce markets to improve health in underserved communities

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Thu, Apr 5th 2018 05:00 pm
'Veggie van' model led by Dr. Leone expanding to Western New York
Congressman Brian Higgins announced a five-year, $3.1 million federal grant from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) for a project led by University at Buffalo department of community health and health behavior assistant professor Dr. Lucia Leone to expand access to fresh food in underserved communities through mobile produce markets.
"Access to high-quality, healthy foods is a real challenge for far too many," Higgins said. "This project, which aims to reach people where they are, will help to drive successful outcomes in the advancement of healthier communities."
This new program builds off a smaller project Leone conducted with colleagues from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she was a postdoctoral fellow and faculty member before joining the faculty at UB.
The team recently published a paper in the International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity showing mobile markets may help improve fruit and vegetable intake in lower-income communities. It's the first published report of a randomized controlled trial for a mobile market. That study followed 142 participants in four counties in North Carolina.
This new funding will allow Leone and her team to expand their work by helping organizations across the Northeast and Southeast start mobile markets using the "veggie van" model. They plan to work with at least one organization in the Buffalo area to start a new mobile market program or expand the reach of a current program.
"We want to test this program more widely to determine if the effects we saw in North Carolina can be replicated," Leone said.
Through a request for proposal process, an advisory committee will select between six and eight organizations that will receive small grants to use toward either starting a "veggie van" or operating an existing one. The money will help the organizations implement a best-practices toolkit to run mobile markets more effectively and in a financially sustainable way.
"That was a big challenge with our own 'veggie van' program in North Carolina," Leone said. "It's difficult to provide high-quality produce at reduced costs in a financially viable way."
Another challenge mobile produce markets face is tracking purchases to gain a better understanding of which fruits and vegetables people are buying.
"Supermarkets can track everything you've purchased if you use your loyalty card. They can see how purchasing is changing based on what they are doing. We'd like to do something similar with this program," Leone said.
To that end, each mobile produce market selected will have access to purchase tracking software developed by the Arcadia Center for Sustainable Food & Agriculture, a nonprofit based in Alexandria, Virginia. The software will allow researchers to access anonymous purchasing data from any mobile produce market that uses the tool, which will help identify national trends.
Researchers will also use an instrument, called the veggie meter, which measures skin carotenoids, an objective method for determining whether someone has increased their fruit and vegetable intake as a result of having access to a mobile produce market.
Leone's collaborators on the project include Samina Raja, an international expert on sustainable food systems and healthy communities who directs the Food Systems Planning and Healthy Communities Lab in UB's School of Architecture and Planning, and Laurene Tumiel Berhalter, director of community translational research in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB, plus researchers at UNC's Center for Health Promotion and Disease Control and Kenan-Flagler Business School.

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