NEW ORLEANS — The FISH (Food Insecurity and its Sequalae on Health) Study, led by Tiffany Wesley Ardoin, MD, FACP, Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine at LSU Health New Orleans’ Baton Rouge Regional Campus, reports that a clinic-based community program improved food security scores, healthy eating behaviors, and depression scores in a vulnerable, food-insecure population in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The findings are published in the MDPI journal, Nutrients, available here.The collaborative Geaux Get Healthy Clinical Program, created in 2020 and directed by LSU Health’s Dr. Wesley Ardoin at a North Baton Rouge Our Lady of the Lake clinic where she practices, provides comprehensive education and access to resources while leveraging community partnerships and a clinical setting as an intervention to improve food insecurity.
“This program has been a long time in the making and is the result of collaboration between LSU Health New Orleans’ Baton Rouge Regional Campus, Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center, local Baton Rouge government, large organizations such as American Heart Association and local community-based organizations,” notes Dr. Wesley Ardoin. “It is unique in that we don’t just give food or money to people, but we provide education and access to resources to promote sustainable change.”
The authors write, “Addressing food insecurity is complex due to the diverse range of factors contributing to its fluctuating nature, spanning from the production and distribution of food to individual challenges such as living in a food desert, financial constraints, or lack of knowledge and resources when purchasing and preparing nutritious meals. To date, there is no standardized design for programs addressing food insecurity.With the improvement in food insecurity and nutrition behaviors, the Geaux Get Healthy Clinical Program may serve as a model for other programs addressing food insecurity in the future.
Other authors included Dr. Donald Mercante at LSU Health New Orleans School of Public Health, Elizabeth Perry at Our Lady of the Lake Hospital, Chelsea Morgan at the American Heart Association, and Jared Hymowitz at HealthyBR, the Mayor’s Healthy City Initiative for Baton Rouge.The FISH Study was funded by LSU Health New Orleans’ Research Enhancement Program Clinical Research Grant, grant number 5498208018. The Geaux Get Healthy Clinical Program at Our Lady of the Lake received financial support from the Humana Foundation, the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Louisiana Foundation through HealthyBR and by Healthy Blue Louisiana.
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