Cuba's Urban Landscape Needs a Second Round of Innovation for Health.

Cuba's Urban Landscape Needs a Second Round of Innovation for Health. MEDICC Rev. 2015 Jul;17(3):48 Authors: Peña J Abstract Cuba's economy spiraled downward in the 1990s, reeling from the collapse of European socialism and a tightened US embargo. To mitigate the crash's drastic effects, measures were adopted that transformed our urban landscape, especially in large cities such as Havana, paradoxically linking the period to nascent health-promoting options. One of the most important was the introduction of bicycle lanes on city streets, paths daily ridden by people on the over one million bicycles imported to offset the nearly nonexistent public transport caused by fuel shortages. Second, urban gardens began to sprout up, involving urban dwellers in production of their own food, particularly vegetables. Without minimizing the impact of the crisis, these two seemingly disparate phenomena meant people were getting more exercise, consuming fewer fats and carbohydrates and more fresh vegetables. People were even breathing fresher air, with fewer CO2-belching trucks, old cars and buses on the streets and less diesel used to transport produce in from afar. PMID: 26947159 [PubMed - in process]
Source: MEDICC Review - Category: Global & Universal Tags: MEDICC Rev Source Type: research