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Medically Tailored Groceries and Food Resource Coaching

The University of Texas System (UT) logo

The University of Texas System (UT)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Hypertension
Dyslipidemias
Type 2 Diabetes
Nutrition, Healthy

Treatments

Other: Free community food support
Behavioral: Food resource coaching
Behavioral: Medically tailored groceries

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06242808
STU-2023-1166

Details and patient eligibility

About

Eating healthy foods can help people manage health problems, like Type 2 diabetes and heart disease. Many people want to eat healthier, but changing eating behaviors is hard. Patients don't always know what foods to eat for their health problems and are hesitant to try foods that may be unfamiliar. These challenges are made more difficult when families have lower incomes, which makes accessing healthy foods difficult and trying new foods riskier when on a budget. Food is Medicine programs connect people to healthy foods that help them manage health problems. One example is a medically tailored grocery program. This program provides a patient with free groceries selected to help their medical condition. For example, a patient receives fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-salt, low-sugar foods if they have high blood pressure. Food resource coaching is another strategy for eating healthy food. This approach provides a coach that supports learning healthy eating habits when facing financial challenges by using available food resources. Among other strategies, a coach may teach the participant how to meal plan and shop at nearby stores to increase healthy and delicious eating patterns. In our study, the investigators will ask lower-income patients with at least one chronic health problem at a safety-net clinic if they want to participate in a Food is Medicine program. Patients that want to participate will be randomly placed in one of three groups. One group will get medically tailored groceries from a free food market for four months. Another group will get medically tailored groceries and food resource coaching from a free food market. The last group will get free food from the same market for four months, but food will not be medically tailored, and they will not meet with a coach. Participants will have the option to continue getting food from the market at the end of the study if they want to. This study will help us learn what patients think about Food is Medicine programs and how to best carry out these programs in the future. The study will also help us determine if providing medically tailored groceries and food resource coaching helps patients improve their diet. The investigators will use what is learned in this study to create a larger and longer program that can be provided in safety-net clinics throughout Dallas-Fort Worth. Our main goal is to build a sustainable and helpful program for patients that may not otherwise have access to healthy foods and eating habits that set the foundation for better health.

Full description

People with lower income face barriers to managing chronic diseases, such as food, housing, and economic insecurity, resource scarcity, and uncertainty around what foods meet dietary needs. Medically tailored groceries (MTG) address some barriers by providing direct access to food tailored to manage a patient's medical condition. Food resource coaching (Coach) can also address additional barriers. A food resource coach supports a patient in learning healthy eating habits when faced with financial challenges by leveraging all available food resources. For example, a coach may teach the patient how to meal plan and shop at nearby stores to improve eating patterns. Providing medically tailored groceries and food resource coaching (MTG + Coach) concurrently through a free community food market may address multiple barriers to nutrition promoting behavior change and maximize the long-term potential of Food is Medicine interventions. In this study, the investigators will recruit and enroll 210 patients of a local safety-net health center with at least one diet-related chronic condition in a randomized controlled trial. Patients will be screened for chronic diseases and income eligibility at the clinic and invited to enroll if eligible. Those who enroll will be randomized to receive MTG from a free co-located food market for 4 months (intervention 1), MTG + Coach (intervention 2) or free food from the market for 4 months (control). MTG + Coach will meet individually with a food resource coach to select MTG from the market inventory of nutritious options, discuss goals related to food and finances, and receive resources for budget management. Control can select the same amount of food from the market but will not receive tailored recommendations or interact with a coach. Feasibility, adherence, and nutritional quality of foods selected will be assessed with administrative data collected by the study team and market. Nutrition security and diet quality will be assessed with pre- and post-questionnaires. Pre- and post- qualitative interviews (N=60) will be conducted to solicit feedback on linkage to supportive services via the medical system, MTG, and MTG + Coach. MTG + Coach may provide a sustainable approach to address nutritional needs of patients with lower income as patients can utilize strategies from coaching and make MTG selections from the market after the study ends. Findings will inform a larger and longer study that assesses changes in cardiometabolic outcomes.

Enrollment

210 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Income <185% of the federal poverty threshold (self-report)
  2. diagnosis of Diabetes, Dyslipidemia, and/or Hypertension verified by electronic health record
  3. age >18 years
  4. residence in one of 18 Zone Improvement Plan (ZIP) Codes served by Crossroads that surround the RedBird clinic (75203, 75208, 75211, 75212, 75216, 75217, 75224, 75232, 75233, 75236, 75237, 75241, 75249, 75052, 75104, 75115, 75116, 75137)
  5. Able to consent

Exclusion criteria

  1. Condition or dietary restriction that precludes eating study foods (e.g., liquid diet, eating disorder)
  2. Another member of the household participating
  3. Receipt of services from Crossroads within the past 6-months
  4. Limited life expectancy, or major psychiatric illness or substance misuse that impairs participation
  5. Planning to move from the area within the next 6 months
  6. Unwilling to participate.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

210 participants in 3 patient groups

Usual free community food market services
Active Comparator group
Description:
Usual free community food market services, no tailoring of food received.
Treatment:
Other: Free community food support
Medically tailored groceries and food resource coaching
Experimental group
Description:
Medically tailored groceries and food resource coaching.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Medically tailored groceries
Behavioral: Food resource coaching
Other: Free community food support
Medically tailored groceries
Experimental group
Description:
Medically tailored groceries only, no coaching.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Medically tailored groceries
Other: Free community food support

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Carolyn Program Coordinator, MS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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