Giving Compass' Take:
- Anthony Nicome spotlights FreshRx Oklahoma, a nonprofit Tulsa-based nonprofit produce prescription program using a food-as-medicine approach to manage chronic disease.
- What are the benefits of a food-as-medicine approach to managing chronic illness? How can you support equitable access to nutritious food for all members of your community?
- Learn more about key issues in food and nutrition and how you can help.
- Search our Guide to Good for nonprofits focused on food equity in your area.
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The state of Oklahoma recently passed the Food is Medicine Act (OK SB806), landmark legislation that recognizes the role of nutrition in preventing and managing chronic disease. Anti-hunger and public health advocates hope the new law utilizing a food-as-medicine approach will lay the groundwork for integrating fresh, locally grown food into clinical care by supporting produce prescription programs and encouraging healthcare payers to reimburse for food-as-medicine interventions.
FreshRx Oklahoma, a Tulsa-based nonprofit food prescription program, is already showing how this model can work in practice. Founded and led by Erin Martin, the organization works to deliver measurable health outcomes through their produce prescription program. They strive to help individuals managing chronic conditions like diabetes reduce A1C numbers, preserve the ability to work and live fully, and keep families and communities thriving.
“If we say we care about equity,” Martin asks, “why would we give the communities with the worst outcomes the cheapest food?”
The program's food-as-medicine approach offers significant healthcare cost-savings, Martin says. “We’ve probably saved the state of Oklahoma over US$5 million,” she tells Food Tank, “while spending just a fifth of the typical cost to treat someone with chronic illness.” That’s important when the U.S. is experiencing what Martin calls a “financial crisis in healthcare.”
FreshRx creates trust by hiring from the community, including program graduates, and offering high-quality, locally grown food. In addition to receiving ingredients, participants are invited to take part in cooking demos and educational opportunities that are designed to be hands-on and culturally relevant. Martin explains that the participants are supported along their journey.
Engagement rates have jumped from 15 percent to over 85 percent, she tells Food Tank. People are showing up, cooking, sharing, and encouraging each other. “Food is our Trojan horse,” Martin tells Food Tank. “It brings people in. But what we’re really doing is healing.”
But systemic challenges remain. Funding can be inconsistent and insurers are sometimes hesitant to support the program, Martin explains. But that’s beginning to change as organizations like FreshRx Oklahoma prove that Food is Medicine initiatives yield tangible results.
Read the full article about FreshRx Oklahoma by Anthony Nicome at Food Tank.