Health Affairs November 27, 2024
Erika Hanson, Rachel Landauer, Alissa Wassung, Maya Park, Cate Hensley, Kathryn Garfield

Across the country, insurers are increasingly offering food- and nutrition-related benefits, including treatments that provide access to nutritious food through the health care system for patients with specific health conditions and social needs, commonly known as Food is Medicine (FIM). In recent years, the United States has experienced accelerating federal support for and state adoption of policies that integrate FIM into health care delivery and insurance coverage. This movement is due to several factors, including the US onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which stressed the high rates of diet-related chronic diseases and included response-package funding and policies that supported FIM programs; the accumulating number of peer-reviewed studies showing the health outcome, cost, and use benefits of specific FIM interventions; and...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Govt Agencies, Insurance, Patient / Consumer, Provider
High cost of weight loss drugs drives employers to require nutrition counseling, in boost for startups
Beware of Contemporary Health Spending Trends: Prepare for Change
US overdose deaths far outpace other countries: Report
America’s frustration with the health care industry
Five more Health and Aging Tech offerings from CES 2025

Share This Article