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Living Hungry Healthy Foods Prescription Program

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Diabetes Mellitus
Interventions
Other: produce prescription and nutrition education
Registration Number
NCT04205617
Lead Sponsor
Tufts University
Brief Summary

This study is a pre/post, pilot evaluation of the 4-month, Living Hungry program for food-insecure patients with uncontrolled diabetes. The program provides free produce, whole grains and legumes to participants and their household every-other week, in addition, to nutrition education and glucose monitoring devices. The study is analyzing diabetes management indicators, including HbA1c, dietary quality, food insecurity, and medication adherence, plus health care utilization.

Detailed Description

The Living Hungry Collaborative, in partnership with the South Florida Hunger Coalition, previously operated a pilot program, Fresh Food Farmacy, staged from June 1, 2018, to September 29, 2018. The program consisted of nine Eat Well Pop-Up Pantry events at the My Clinic in Jupiter, Florida, serving 104 patients and feeding approximately 300 people including their families. Each set of groceries contained two weeks' worth of "medically tailored" groceries for diabetic-friendly meals for food-insecure patients diagnosed with diabetes or prediabetes. All clients involved in the intervention were referred by staff at the same four clinics that will participate in this study: My Clinic, C.L. Brumback Clinic in Jupiter, Jupiter Medical Center, and FoundCare. The Living Hungry Collaborative has an ongoing program to further evolve and test the "Fresh Food Farmacy", renamed as the Healthy Food Prescription Program intervention in Palm Beach County, for food-insecure, diabetic patients.

In addition to receiving diabetic appropriate groceries at the former Fresh Food Farmacy events, clients will be engaged in diabetes education classes led by volunteer doctors and nurses, cooking demonstrations, shared meals, 1:1 and group coaching by nutritionists and dietitians on best choices from a menu for diabetics, and tasting new recipes with produce from the pop-up event. The pilot program allowed Living Hungry to fine-tune the patient referral process, distribution logistics, and establish strong partnerships required for the next phase of the program. However, gaps exist to understand the extent to which the program design is improving the health of the participating diabetic patients.

Living Hungry will partner with Tufts University to conduct an evaluation of this existing program on key health outcomes that concern the partner clinics, specifically: biomarkers including Hemoglobin A1C, BMI, blood pressure, lipid profile, health care utilization including medication use, hospitalizations, emergency department visits, and health care costs, plus dietary quality, food insecurity, medication use, and quality of life indicators. The study is a pilot evaluation, implementing a quasi-experimental, pre/post study design.

The Living Hungry Healthy Foods Prescription Program is a community-based program that will be available to individuals whether or not they participate in the evaluation by Tufts University. This program is using the same referral and data collections procedures as the pilot, which include having physicians at the partner clinics refer patients with HbA1C levels greater than 8.0 mmol/mol and who are food insecure to Living Hungry to participate in the program. In addition, Living Hungry will again collect data on HbA1c, BMI, blood pressure, lipid profiles, and distribute a survey to participants.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
35
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Referred patient from one of four medical partners: My Clinic, C.L. Brumback Clinic, FoundCare and Jupiter Medical Center and has been a patient for at least one-year.
  2. Diabetic with A1C over 8.0
  3. Adults 18 years of age or older
  4. Food-insecure
Read More
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Referred patients with HbA1c levels below 8.0 mmol/mol
  2. Minors
  3. Adults with severe mental illness who cannot provide informed consent, unless they have present a lawful caregiver or power of attorney.
  4. Anyone who does not plan on staying in West Palm Beach for the next 4 months.
  5. Pregnant women (can still receive services through the program but will not be included in the analysis)
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Healthy Food Prescriptionproduce prescription and nutrition educationParticipants receive services through the Living Hungry program for food insecure diabetic patients.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Hemoglobin A1cpre/post change in HbA1c in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

will be measured by blood draws at first and last program event

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in systolic blood pressurepre/post change in systolic blood pressure in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

measured at first and last program event

Change in diastolic blood pressurepre/post change in diastolic blood pressure in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

measured at first and last program event

Change in frequency of hospitalizationspre/post change in hospitalizations in participants from baseline to one month after completion of the program

will be measured through surveys and data from electronic medical records

Change in frequency of emergency department admissionspre/post change in emergency department admissions in participants from baseline to one month after completion of the program

will be measured through surveys and data from electronic medical records

Change in total health care costspre/post change in total health care costs in participants from baseline to one month after completion of the program

will be measured through data from hospital records

Change in food insecuritypre/post change in food insecurity in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

Food insecurity will be measured using the USDA 9-question food insecurity screener

Change in daily servings of fruits and vegetablespre/post change in daily servings of fruits and vegetables in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

Will be assessed through a food frequency questionnaire modeled off the USDA FINI assessment tool

Change in daily servings of whole grainspre/post change in daily servings of whole grains in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

Will be assessed through a food frequency questionnaire modeled off the USDA FINI assessment tool

Change in daily servings of lean proteinspre/post change in daily servings of lean proteins in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

Will be assessed through a food frequency questionnaire modeled off the USDA FINI assessment tool and includes: nuts, seeds, legumes, poultry, and fish.

Change in daily servings of sugary snacks and drinkspre/post change in daily servings of sugary snacks and drinks in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

Will be assessed through a food frequency questionnaire modeled off the USDA FINI assessment tool and includes: sugar sweetened beverages, pastries, cookies, cakes, candy, and other sweets

Change in medication adherencepre/post change in medication adherence in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

Measured as a composite score that will be assessed through a survey. Components include: frequency of sacrificing medication purchases for other household needs (such as food, utilities) and change in medication use.

Change in adhering to recommended diabetes management planpre/post change in in adhering to recommended diabetes management in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

Measured as a composite scale that will be assessed through a survey. Components include frequency in which participants followed the recommendations of their physicians to manage their diabetes.

Change in blood LDL levelpre/post change in systolic blood LDL levels in participants from baseline to completion of the program at 4 months

measured at first and last program event through a blood draw

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Living Hungry

🇺🇸

West Palm Beach, Florida, United States

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