Home » Food As Health Alliance at UK gets inaugural grant from American Heart Association

Food As Health Alliance at UK gets inaugural grant from American Heart Association

Learning how to improve what the chronically ill eat
Alison Gustafson is director of the Food as Health Alliance at UK. Photo by Sabrina Hounsell.

LEXINGTON, Ky. — The American Heart Association (AHA) has given the Food as Health Alliance (FAHA) one of its first Health Care by Food Initiative awards to be used to examine and improve the process of creating a funnel for feeding patients into food as medicine programs.

The grant will be used, said FAHA director Alison Gustafson, to examine how a user-centered design program can improve screening, referral enrollment and engagement in food is medicine programs for adults experiencing food insecurity and diagnosed with hypertension.

FAHA is housed in the University of Kentucky Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment. The goal is to identify the most suitable and effective model(s) in the short term, while also considering design elements for long-term sustainability and scalability. This initiative specifically targets individuals facing food insecurity and those with diet-sensitive chronic diseases.

Also involved are UK HealthCare and Appalachian Regional Healthcare with key partnerships from Instacart, Kroger Health with Soda Health, Mom’s Meals and Food City.

“We are honored to be part of the American Heart Association ‘Health Care by Food’ initiative with so many esteemed researchers,” said Gustafson, professor in the Department of Dietetics and Human Nutrition. “We are looking forward to working with our partners across the state to improve screening, referral and enrollment practices to improve patient outcomes.”

Gustafson has partnered with Instacart, Mom’s Meals and Food City on current pilot projects across Kentucky to help develop the infrastructure for patients receiving food as medicine programs. Currently, the team is developing a referral hub for health-related social needs (HRSB) with key organizations in Kentucky.

“Integrating research efforts in collaboration with institutions nationwide will help identify cost- effective food is medicine interventions to improve health and make healthy food an essential component of health care,” said Kevin G. Volpp, M.D., Ph.D., the association’s Health Care by Food initiative research lead, the association’s Presidential Advisory on food is medicine writing group chair and Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics Director at the University of Pennsylvania.

FAHA seeks to bring together clinical and community research spanning across agriculture, food, health care and nutrition to address food insecurity and diet-related chronic disease. Researchers, community partners, food commodity producers, health care partners and students will explore innovative strategies to improve patient clinical outcomes and Kentuckians’ health.

The AHA grant indicates recognition of the effective work the Food As Health Alliance has already been doing to incorporate food into the process of addressing chronic illness, said Carolyn Lauckner, assistant professor in the Department of Behavioral Science at the UK College of Medicine and co-principal investigator on the grant with Gustafson.

“I am thrilled to be working with this outstanding group of scholars and practitioners committed to using innovative, community-engaged research methods to improve the health of all Kentuckians,” said Lauckner.

For more information on FAHA, visit https://foodashealthalliance.ca.uky.edu. For more information about the American Heart Association’s Health Care by Food Initiative, visit https://healthcarexfood.org.

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