Houghtaling Bailey, Short Eliza, Long Christopher R, Anderson Steeves Elizabeth T, Isack Maryan, Flournoy Laura, Cawrse Nicole, August Elise, Summerfelt Wm Thomas, Calloway Eric
Center for Nutrition & Health Impact, Omaha, NE, USA.
Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Transl Behav Med. 2025 Jan 16;15(1). doi: 10.1093/tbm/ibaf013.
Food is Medicine (FIM) programs identify people experiencing food insecurity and diet-related chronic disease and connect them with nutritious foods. Food banks and healthcare partners are well positioned to deliver FIM programs; however, there is limited knowledge about factors that influence FIM program implementation in this context.
The goal of this study was to understand barriers and facilitators to FIM program implementation within food bank-healthcare partnerships in diverse US settings.
A phenomenological study using semi-structured interviews was conducted with 21 programmatically and contextually diverse Food as Medicine 3.0 (FAM3) grantees, including food bank leads and some healthcare partners. The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) 2.0 informed interview guide development, coding, and interpretation. Interviews and the analysis were completed by a team of trained researchers following best practices. Data was analyzed using Dedoose (version 9.2.12).
Fifty participants across 21 FAM3 grantees engaged in an interview. Most grantees shared challenges related to initiating and maintaining the healthcare partnerships needed for FIM programs. The tracking, gathering, and/or sharing of FIM program implementation and evaluation data was another primary challenge. Furthermore, limited healthcare and food bank staff capacity to carry out FIM programs was another prominent barrier. Despite these challenges, FIM programs were considered adaptable, testable, and to meet a core need among neighbors, all of which were implementation facilitators.
Results of this study inform the need to design and test implementation strategies to overcome barriers to the implementation of a promising food bank-healthcare partnership model for FIM.
“食物即药物”(FIM)项目旨在识别面临粮食不安全和与饮食相关慢性病的人群,并为他们提供营养食品。食品银行和医疗保健合作伙伴具备实施FIM项目的良好条件;然而,对于在此背景下影响FIM项目实施的因素,我们了解有限。
本研究的目的是了解在美国不同地区的食品银行 - 医疗保健合作伙伴关系中,FIM项目实施的障碍和促进因素。
采用半结构化访谈进行了一项现象学研究,对象是21个在项目和背景方面各不相同的“食物即药物3.0”(FAM3)受资助者,包括食品银行负责人和一些医疗保健合作伙伴。实施研究综合框架(CFIR)2.0为访谈指南的制定、编码和解释提供了依据。访谈和分析由一组经过培训的研究人员按照最佳实践完成。数据使用Dedoose(版本9.2.12)进行分析。
21个FAM3受资助者中的50名参与者接受了访谈。大多数受资助者分享了在启动和维持FIM项目所需的医疗保健合作伙伴关系方面遇到的挑战。FIM项目实施和评估数据的跟踪、收集和/或共享是另一个主要挑战。此外,医疗保健和食品银行工作人员实施FIM项目的能力有限是另一个突出障碍。尽管存在这些挑战,但FIM项目被认为具有适应性、可测试性,并能满足邻居的核心需求,所有这些都是实施的促进因素。
本研究结果表明,有必要设计和测试实施策略,以克服实施一种有前景的食品银行 - 医疗保健合作伙伴关系FIM模式的障碍。