In pilot project, doctors prescribe fresh produce

Morgan Lichtenstein, left, who works with the Healthy Weight Program, shops with Deannah Ryner, 8, at a farmers market in Boston on Thursday.THE NEW YORK TIMES / JODI HILTON



'The farm stand is becoming the new apothecary, dispensing apples -- not to mention artichokes, asparagus and arugula -- to fill a novel kind of prescription.



Doctors at three health centers in Massachusetts have begun advising patients to eat "prescription produce" from local farmers' markets, in an effort to fight obesity in children of low-income families. Now they will give coupons amounting to $1 a day for each member of a patient's family to promote healthy meals.

"A lot of these kids have a very limited range of fruits and vegetables that are acceptable and familiar to them. Potentially, they will try more," said Dr. Suki Tepperberg, a family physician at Codman Square Health Centerin Dorchester, one of the program sites. "The goal is to get them to increase their consumption of fruit and vegetables by one serving a day."'



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