The socioeconomic and cultural factors that influence what people eat can cause inequities that are detrimental to health, especially in underserved communities. The Food is Medicine movement strives to reduce these disparities by enhancing access to nutritious food, providing education, and encouraging behavioral changes. To support patients with medical needs, researchers at Boston Medical Center (BMC) are collaborating with a local grocer, Nubian Markets, to develop a labeling system that identifies prepared meals medically tailored for health conditions like diabetes. The findings were published in HealthCare: The Journal of Delivery Science and Innovation on August 6, 2024.

“We aim to provide resources that people can relate to, with the goal of reducing health disparities. Through our quality improvement research, we seek to really understand what patients want and need and how they should receive those resources,” says Olivia Thomas, a registered dietician at BMC and lead author on the study.

The research team partnered with the patient community to codesign their Food is Medicine educational materials and programs to be more culturally inclusive. They found that actively engaging BMC’s diverse patient population in reimagining their programs enables the creation of generalizable, relatable resources that could help reduce disparities in health outcomes related to diet. 

The researchers conducted surveys in six different languages between January and May 2023 in adult primary care settings about eating behaviors, food choices, and nutrition education preferences. To obtain feedback on disease-specific resources, they held a virtual focus group with patients who have type 2 diabetes.

Thomas and colleagues found that patients wanted educational materials available in different languages and modalities (in person vs virtual), and access to support through nutrition counseling, hands-on cooking classes, and peer groups. To address these needs, the team is working to develop multilingual cooking classes in Spanish, Portuguese, Haitian-Creole, and Vietnamese.

The researchers also found that 76% of patients ate meals prepared outside of their homes because of scheduling constraints but didn’t feel like they had enough guidance on nutrition when ordering out.  Patients with medical needs like type 2 diabetes wanted practical, empowering guidance to find medically tailored meals and figure out how to portion foods. The labeling system at Nubian Markets will enable clinicians to provide unrestricted grocery vouchers rather than prescriptions for specific foods, a unique aspect of BMC’s Food is Medicine program. (BMC has invested $1.9M in Nubian Markets, a Black-owned venture to create a local grocery store, café, and halal butchery offering high-quality, and culturally relevant foods in Roxbury’s Nubian Square.)

"Food insecurity is not just a matter of access; it profoundly impacts health and wellbeing, particularly within communities of color. At BMC, we recognize that addressing food insecurity is essential to achieving health equity. This study is a crucial extension of our commitment to prioritize food as medicine, and ultimately improve the health outcomes of our patient populations,” says Thea James, co-Executive Director of the Health Equity Accelerator that funded this work and Vice President of Mission and Associate Chief Medical Officer at BMC.

About Boston Medical Center 

Boston Medical Center models a new kind of excellence in healthcare, where innovative and equitable care empowers all patients to thrive. We combine world-class clinicians and cutting-edge treatments with compassionate, quality care that extends beyond our walls. As an award-winning health equity leader, our diverse clinicians and staff interrogate racial disparities in care and partner with our community to dismantle systemic inequities. And as a national leader in research and the teaching affiliate for Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, we’re driving the future of care.

Media Contact:

gina.mantica@bmc.org
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