Caldwell Julia I, Darwish-Elsherbiny Fatinah, Macon Keisha, Moon Gloria, Casillas Alejandra, Brown Arleen F, Shah Dipa, Kuo Tony
Nutrition and Physical Activity Program, Division of Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, 3530 Wilshire Blvd., 8th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90010, USA.
Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, 200 Medical Plaza, Suite 420, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Nutrients. 2025 May 29;17(11):1849. doi: 10.3390/nu17111849.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Safety-net health centers are increasingly screening for food insecurity and providing patients with referrals to public assistance programs-e.g., the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). However, not all individuals actively participate in or are eligible for these programs. Onsite distributions of free produce at health center sites represent a promising complementary option for addressing this need. This study examines free produce events at these sites and their associations with attendees' food and vegetable consumption, household food insecurity, and SNAP participation (study outcomes).
In 2024, an intercept survey was conducted with 497 adults attending produce events at 16 safety-net health center sites in Los Angeles County, California, USA. Descriptive analyses profiled these food events, gathering information on attendee characteristics. Multivariable regressions examined associations between event attendance and study outcomes.
Over 80% of attendees lived in food-insecure households. Among those who were patients of the event site, 68% and 28%, respectively, indicated they received information about Medicaid and SNAP from the clinic staff. Compared to first-time attendees, those who attended produce events frequently consumed, on average, one additional serving of fruit and vegetables a day ( < 0.000).
Offering free produce events at health center sites, where many attendees receive usual care, is a promising strategy for increasing healthy food access among safety-net populations. This underutilized approach is a viable intervention for improving access to healthy food, especially in circumstances where patients are not eligible for public assistance or nutrition incentive and/or food pharmacy programs are not readily available.
背景/目的:安全网健康中心越来越多地对粮食不安全情况进行筛查,并为患者提供转介至公共援助项目的服务,例如补充营养援助项目(SNAP)。然而,并非所有个体都积极参与这些项目或符合项目资格。在健康中心现场分发免费农产品是满足这一需求的一个有前景的补充选项。本研究调查了这些场所的免费农产品活动及其与参与者的食物和蔬菜消费、家庭粮食不安全状况以及SNAP参与情况(研究结果)之间的关联。
2024年,在美国加利福尼亚州洛杉矶县的16个安全网健康中心场所,对497名参加农产品活动的成年人进行了拦截式调查。描述性分析对这些食品活动进行了剖析,收集了参与者特征方面的信息。多变量回归分析研究了活动参与情况与研究结果之间的关联。
超过80%的参与者生活在粮食不安全家庭。在活动场所的患者中,分别有68%和28%表示他们从诊所工作人员那里获得了关于医疗补助和SNAP的信息。与首次参与者相比,经常参加农产品活动的人平均每天多食用一份水果和蔬菜(<0.000)。
在许多参与者接受常规护理的健康中心场所提供免费农产品活动,是增加安全网人群获得健康食品机会的一项有前景的策略。这种未得到充分利用的方法是改善获得健康食品机会的一种可行干预措施,特别是在患者不符合公共援助资格或营养激励措施和/或食品药房项目难以获得的情况下。