Food For Thought: A Vision For Generative 'Food Is Medicine'.

John R Lumpkin, Merry Davis, Valerie Stewart
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Abstract

In this article, we review the history of the Food Is Medicine movement, discuss the extractive nature of many Food Is Medicine models in the US, and present our vision for a generative model of Food Is Medicine centered on community-based organizations (CBOs) and local food systems. Many Food Is Medicine initiatives are driven by CBOs, but too often the CBOs participating in these programs are undervalued. The combination of inadequate payment rates, capacity needs, and complex administrative requirements prevents CBOs from realizing their full potential and threatens their sustainability. In a generative model, Food Is Medicine programs operate through mutually supportive partnerships among payers, health systems, and vendors; CBOs have the resources, capacity, and infrastructure needed to source food from small- and medium-size local farms, hire and retain staff with appropriate expertise, and distribute culturally relevant foods tailored to community preferences. Regional systems to manage administration and contracting for Food Is Medicine programs could reduce the burden on CBOs. Philanthropic organizations and health care partners should expand efforts to advance a generative approach to Food Is Medicine.

思考的食物:生成“食物就是药”的愿景。
在本文中,我们回顾了食品即医学运动的历史,讨论了美国许多食品即医学模型的萃取性,并提出了我们对以社区组织(cbo)和当地食品系统为中心的食品即医学生成模型的愿景。许多“食品即药物”计划都是由cbo推动的,但参与这些计划的cbo往往被低估了。支付率不足、能力需要和复杂的行政要求等因素使社区组织无法充分发挥其潜力,并威胁到其可持续性。在生成模式下,食品即药物项目通过支付方、卫生系统和供应商之间相互支持的伙伴关系运作;cbo拥有所需的资源、能力和基础设施,可以从当地中小型农场采购食物,雇用和留住具有适当专业知识的员工,并根据社区偏好分发与文化相关的食物。管理食品即药物项目的行政和合同的区域系统可以减轻cbo的负担。慈善组织和卫生保健合作伙伴应加大努力,推进“食物即药物”的生成方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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