Primary Care and Food Bank Collaboration to Address Food Insecurity: A Pilot Randomized Trial.

Robert L Ferrer, Luz-Myriam Neira, Gualberto L De Leon Garcia, Kristin Cuellar, Jasmine Rodriguez
Author Information
  1. Robert L Ferrer: Department of Family and Community Medicine, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, USA. ORCID
  2. Luz-Myriam Neira: San Antonio Food Bank, San Antonio, TX, USA.
  3. Gualberto L De Leon Garcia: San Antonio Food Bank, San Antonio, TX, USA.
  4. Kristin Cuellar: San Antonio Food Bank, San Antonio, TX, USA.
  5. Jasmine Rodriguez: Department of Family and Community Medicine, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, USA.

Abstract

Food insecurity is common in the United States and linked to poor control of conditions influenced by diet. We conducted a pilot randomized trial to test whether a novel partnership between a primary care practice and a municipal food bank would improve control of type 2 diabetes among patients with food insecurity. Participants received food bank produce delivered twice monthly to the practice site, brief teaching from a food bank dietitian, and home-based education from a community health worker. After 6 months, glycosylated hemoglobin decreased (absolute change) by 3.1% in the intervention group vs 1.7% in the control group ( = .012). Scores on Starting the Conversation-Diet, a brief dietary measure, improved in the intervention group by 2.47 on a 14-point scale ( < .001). Body mass indexes (BMIs) were unchanged. In this early-stage study, onsite collaboration between primary care and a regional food bank generated clinically meaningful reductions in HbA and improvements in diet.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. UL1 TR001120/NCATS NIH HHS

Word Cloud

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