Public health campaigns are imperative to alleviating food insecurity, Pat Van Burkleo, executive director of Feeding Louisiana, the Louisiana Food Bank Association, explained in an interview.
Public health campaigns are imperative to alleviating food insecurity, Pat Van Burkleo, executive director of Feeding Louisiana, the Louisiana Food Bank Association, explained in an interview.
Transcript
How can public health campaigns and education efforts be tailored to raise awareness about the relationship between food insecurity and chronic diseases?
Yeah, I mean any public campaign—we have a billboard campaign right now about not eating junk food and eating fresh fruits and vegetables, and we get comments about seeing our billboards all the time. And I think it's just that education is always good. Providing educational programs about nutrition and the right kind of foods and where to shop, those are all valuable. They may not change behavior immediately, but it's an educational process that they now know. It will take a while for them to maybe take their knowledge and make it into habits but we also have to have the resources in their communities so they can develop these new habits. And so it's great to have education, but we need to fall back through to get resources so they can implement what they learn.
We've got a couple of things that are going on. One, we have a grant that we are trying to buy local produce, local farmers to put into the food banks. And so we have a $10 million grant from the USDA through the Department of Agriculture, that we're finding local farmers to do that. So we're very excited to have homegrown vegetables and fruit and catfish coming into our clients. And we think that's a success to help bill the small farmers, as well as help our neighbors.
Real-World Data Show Sotorasib Effective for NSCLC With KRAS Mutation
May 18th 2024Data from real-world and clinical-trial settings on frontline monotherapy treatment with the KRAS inhibitor sotorasib both show similar progression-free survivals and a high likelihood that the treatment’s efficacy is not affected with dose reduction.
Read More
Health Equity and Access Weekly Roundup: May 18, 2024
May 18th 2024The US Senate hosted a panel addressing physician and health care shortages and efforts to increase minority representation in the medical field. An expert discussed initiatives to prevent senior homelessness. Advocates called for the repeal of the Comstock Act. Regulatory reforms are called for to improve rural cancer patients' access to pharmacies. Research reveals the impact of denials on patient access to immunology treatments.
Read More
Frameworks for Advancing Health Equity: Urban Health Outreach
May 9th 2024In the series debut episode of "Frameworks for Advancing Health Equity," Mary Sligh, CRNP, and Chelsea Chappars, of Allegheny Health Network, explain how the Urban Health Outreach program aims to improve health equity for individuals experiencing homelessness.
Listen
Study Highlights Significant Increases in Utilization, Spending on DMD Drugs in Medicaid
May 17th 2024The findings add to recent research on the growing utilization, expenditure, and prices of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) therapies in the current landscape, an area health care policy could potentially address.
Read More