Kyshiag, are you by any remote chance posting from the Chicago area? I've heard this exact complaint/remedy in the press here in Chicagoland, particularly the complaint that there are not enough decent grocery stores selling fresh foods in minority neighborhoods. I've also read stories where barber shops are being utilized as places where information can be more readily disseminated, which seems to me to be a clever idea.Re: mistrust, this might sound stupid, but I'd love to get your feedback. Some years ago, I read about a new blood pressure medication that seemed to work particularly well for African-Americans. There was resistance to the idea that a particular medication works better for one population than for another because it all smacked of racism, and the spectre of mistrust was raised. Here comes the stupid part...not long after I read about this, there was an episode on "House" where a black physician prescribed this medication to a black patient who refused to take it because of this mistrust. It was really interesting because I suspected that this was not entirely fiction.I am pre-D and get my labs done many times a year. I've always been intrigued by the fact that on my lab report, when the egfr is calculated, there is one value ascribed for an African-American patient and another for a non-African-American patient. Do you have any idea what would explain that? Is there a genetic component behind that? For 5 years, I took cyclosporine to dampen down my immune system so that it would slow down its attack on my kidneys (I have fsgs). I'm one of those who reads all of those patient information pamplets, and the one for cyclosporine said that a lesser dose might be more appropriate for patients of Asian descent. Again, I was intrigued by the possibility of inherent genetic differences between ethnicities/races and wondered how a doctor could act upon these differences that wouldn't engender mistrust. What do you think? How would you "address the mistrust"?(OK, I know I'm blathering a bit, but I'm really interested in this. )