Food insecurity is more
than about being hungry, it's about the estimated 1 in 8 Americans who do not
have access to nutritious food.
Susan Morse, Senior Editor August
30, 2019
Food
insecurity costs the health system an additional $53 billion a year, according
to Dr. Hilary Seligman, senior medical advisor for Feeding America and
co-author of a study that looks at the issue
state-by-state.
Food
insecurity can lead to diabetes, heart disease and other chronic conditions,
all of which are costly to health and the healthcare system.
"What's
important to understand is the connection between food insecurity and
health," said Seligman, an associate professor at the University of
California San Francisco. "When people don't have enough money for food,
they use coping strategies, shifting their dietary intake to unhealthy food.
It's these coping strategies that are so poor for your health."
Also,
she said, "Being chronically ill is expensive in the U.S. Money is going
to healthcare rather than the food budget."
Over a
lifetime, it's hard to undo the effects of a poor diet and its consequences.
"A
small improvement in children may have enormous outcomes in the future,"
Seligman said.
Food
insecurity encompasses more than hunger, or wondering where the next meal is
coming from. The U.S. Department of Agriculture defines food insecurity as a
lack of consistent access to enough food for an active, healthy life.
WHY
THIS MATTERS
Food
insecurity has become a major issue for hospitals, which have been making the
transition to value-based care and its goal to keep people healthy.
Chronic
conditions are a major reason for hospital admissions, readmissions and
emergency room visits, all of which are targeted in value-based payment models.
Illness
in a value-based system cannot be addressed without identifying the underlying
environmental, social and behavioral issues that drive ill health.
Payers
Medicare, Medicaid and private insurers offer incentives to reward wellness,
coordinated care and better health outcomes.
Anthem
Foundation Executive Director Lance Chrisman, who has worked for Anthem's
philanthropic arm for about 13 years, said food insecurity has always been an
issue, but in the past five years, the talk about addressing the social
determinants of health has ramped up.
The
foundation is flooded with requests for funding and gives an estimated $16
million to various programs each year.
But one
of the primary areas of focus for the Anthem Foundation is food insecurity.
"When
we start seeing the data and background: one in eight Americans, 40 million
adults, 12 million children struggle with food insecurity," Chrisman said.
WHAT'S
BEING DONE
The
Anthem Foundation recently partnered with The Food Trust and its community-based
program, the Healthy Food Retail Initiative, to increase access to healthy food
in Indianapolis, Indiana; Cleveland, Ohio; and San Jose, California.
The
Anthem Foundation gave a $350,000 grant to the Food Trust Program to launch
beta testing in those cities to take the Healthy Food Retail Initiative to
scale.
The
money subsidizes the cost of fresh fruit, produce and other healthy food to be
sold at low cost in 37 existing brick and mortar markets and convenience
stores. This includes five additional communities on the Eastside of
Indianapolis, where these locations also serve as community health hubs
providing health screenings, nutrition education and cooking lessons.
A 2019
Fitness Index found that only 33.9 percent of Indianapolis residents are eating
two or more fruits a day and just 15.1 percent of residents are eating three or
more vegetables each day. Data also showed more than one in three Indianapolis
residents live in low food access areas where fresh food is difficult to find.
Anthem
has made other food insecurity investments in the Feeding America program, a
nationwide network of more than 200 food banks, a program for college students
in Virginia and in Blessings in a Backpack for elementary school kids.
This is
food as medicine, Chrisman said.
"We
believe eating healthy is just as important as taking medications,"
Seligman
said individuals pay more attention to the edict to take advantage of better
food choices available on-site at the hospital grocery pantry or the local food
bank, if that comes from their physician.
"It
feels the same as getting a prescription," Seligman said.
However,
she said, "The best answer for a food insecure household is SNAP
(Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program)."
Hospitals
are also a good source of finding people who are food insecure.
THE
LARGER TREND
"We're
just at the tip of the iceberg to understand whether they're working,"
Seligman said of programs. "We think if they're supporting food security,
they're working."
Hospitals,
insurers and organizations nationwide have launched food insecurity, housing
and other social determinants of health initiatives. When Montifiore in New
York City invested in housing the homeless, it realized a 300% return on investment from savings,
such as fewer emergency room visits.
Massachusetts
recently introduced the Massachusetts Food as Medicine State Plan.
At last
count, 28 health systems had joined the Medicaid Transformation Projectto improve the
health of underserved individuals and to drive new solutions for untreated
depression, teen suicide, post-traumatic stress disorder and mental illness.
"There
is a vision of a much more broad scale support," Seligman said, adding,
"there is no financing mechanism."
What
motivated her report was being approached by food banks and healthcare partners
that wanted to know the impact of food insecurity in their local communities.
THE
DATA
Feeding
America released a study, "State-Level and County-Level Estimates of
Health Care Costs Associated with Food Insecurity" posted in July by
the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. It includes an interactive map that breaks down healthcare costs
associated with food insecurity on a state level.
Among
approximately 28 million food-insecure adults and 13 million food-insecure
children in the United States in 2016, the excess cost associated with food
insecurity translates to approximately $52.9 billion in excess healthcare
expenditures.
Key
findings include:
On average, healthcare costs for food insecure adults is $1,834 higher than people who are food secure.
The state with the highest healthcare cost per capita associated with food insecurity is Mississippi, at $243 per person. Texas, Louisiana, Florida, and Oklahoma are also among the top five states.
The state with the lowest healthcare cost per capita associated with food insecurity is North Dakota, at $78 per person.
On average, healthcare costs for food insecure adults is $1,834 higher than people who are food secure.
The state with the highest healthcare cost per capita associated with food insecurity is Mississippi, at $243 per person. Texas, Louisiana, Florida, and Oklahoma are also among the top five states.
The state with the lowest healthcare cost per capita associated with food insecurity is North Dakota, at $78 per person.
The
authors used 2011-2013 data from the National Health Interview Survey and the
Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, 2012-2013 data from the Dartmouth Atlas and
2016 data from Feeding America's Map the Meal Gap 2018.
ON THE
RECORD
"We've
known for a long time," Seligman said, "if we eliminate programs in
food security, we end up with extra cost in the healthcare sector."
Twitter: @SusanJMorse
Email the writer: susan.morse@himssmedia.com
Email the writer: susan.morse@himssmedia.com
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