Berkowitz Seth A, Seligman Hilary K, Mozaffarian Dariush
Seth A. Berkowitz (
Hilary K. Seligman, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2025 Apr;44(4):384-390. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2024.01346.
Income distribution, food and nutrition insecurity, and poor diet quality contribute to diet-related disease, which is a major threat to population health and health equity. Based on our review and synthesis of the empirical evidence, we provide a new conceptual model for understanding the interrelationships among income, food security, nutrition security, diet quality, and health. We identify directions for future research and discuss the policy and program implications of the model. Overall, interventions that address income and food security can facilitate, but do not ensure, nutrition security and better diet quality, although they can improve health in other ways. Importantly, even people who are food and nutrition secure and have adequate income frequently have unhealthy diets. Addressing these challenges will require innovative policies to improve nutrition security, diet quality, and health. Such policies should include efforts to increase the availability and accessibility of Food Is Medicine interventions in health care. Health insurance coverage for evidence-based, clinically indicated Food Is Medicine programs is critical to the success of these efforts.
收入分配、粮食和营养不安全以及不良的饮食质量会导致与饮食相关的疾病,这是对人口健康和健康公平的重大威胁。基于我们对实证证据的回顾与综合,我们提供了一个新的概念模型,用于理解收入、粮食安全、营养安全、饮食质量和健康之间的相互关系。我们确定了未来研究的方向,并讨论了该模型的政策和项目意义。总体而言,解决收入和粮食安全问题的干预措施可以促进但不能确保营养安全和更好的饮食质量,尽管它们可以通过其他方式改善健康。重要的是,即使是粮食和营养安全且收入充足的人也经常有不健康的饮食。应对这些挑战将需要创新政策来改善营养安全、饮食质量和健康。此类政策应包括努力增加医疗保健中“食物即药物”干预措施的可及性。为基于证据、临床适用的“食物即药物”项目提供医疗保险覆盖对于这些努力的成功至关重要。