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Addressing Food Insecurity: Lessons Learned from Co-Locating a Food Pantry with a Federally Qualified Health Center Cover

Addressing Food Insecurity: Lessons Learned from Co-Locating a Food Pantry with a Federally Qualified Health Center

Open Access
|Sep 2022

Figures & Tables

Table 1

Data for Crooked Creek Pantry by year.

YEARVISITS (HOUSEHOLDS)INDIVIDUALS SERVEDCLINIC REFERRALS SERVED
20155,28421,2561,298
201610,37642,6572,744
201712,18471,9352,847
201811,68644,4672,953
201918,44385,6504,780
202024,18695,4046,672
202125,877102,3219,659
Table 2

Eskenazi Health Center Pecar Screening and Nutrition Services by Year.

YEARPATIENT VISITS SCREENED FOR FIPATIENT VISITS SCREENED POSITIVE FOR FIPERCENTAGE POSITIVE FI SCREENSINDIVIDUAL PATIENT DIETICIAN VISITSFOOD IS MEDICINE/LIFESTYLE GROUP PARTICIPANTSVEGGIE BOX PARTICIPATION
2018***1447**
20193,3971,02530.20%18644125
20204,6891,73437.00%21233421
20215,8262,15737.00%30113737

[i] *Food Insecurity (FI) Screening, Food is Medicine/Lifestyle Group Visits and Veggie Box Program all implemented 2019.

ijic-22-3-6430-g1.png
Figure 1

Food Insecurity Screening and Referral Workflow.

ijic-22-3-6430-g2.png
Figure 2

“Food is Medicine” paper referral.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.6430 | Journal eISSN: 1568-4156
Language: English
Submitted on: Sep 13, 2021
Accepted on: Sep 12, 2022
Published on: Sep 30, 2022
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2022 Deanna Reinoso, Dawn Haut, Stephen Claffey, Kathy Hahn Keiner, Alejandra Chavez, Nicole Nace, Amy Carter, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.