Food insecurity impacts 1 in 8 people in the United States and 1 in 4 people receiving cancer treatment. Food insecurity is associated with poor dietary quality, adverse health conditions (e.g., Type 2 diabetes, overweight and obesity, hypertension), and worse cancer treatment outcomes. To effectively address food insecurity among people with cancer, screening and effective response programs are needed. The Food to Overcome Disparities (FOOD) program screens breast cancer patients for food insecurity and refers people who screen positive to 11 clinic pantries across New York City. In addition to clinic referrals, researchers have found the addition of monthly grocery vouchers or home grocery delivery to be even more effective at improving treatment completion rates than pantry access alone. Another innovative food security strategy, nutritious no-prep, ready-to-eat meals may also be helpful for patients given that no-prep meals reduce the time and physical demand of food preparation. Nutritious no-prep, ready-to-eat meals have been positively associated with improvements in healthy eating index (HEI) scores, fewer instances of hypoglycemia, and improved quality of life among people with food insecurity that have diabetes, but has yet to be tested among patients with cancer. People receiving cancer treatment, such as infusion services, often report fatigue and other barriers to food preparation, which make no-prep, ready-to-eat meals another potential solution to cancer-specific challenges to healthy eating. In the present study the investigators will test which evidence-based strategies are most effective and well-liked by patients and will inform the development of a comprehensive food security response program at the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center.
In the proposed study, the study team will screen infusion patients for food insecurity and refer those who screen positive to enroll in a randomized controlled trial where participants will receive one of three evidence-based food security programs: 1) Pantry only - Referrals to onsite food pantry or emergency food boxes if the onsite pantry is not open by 2024, 2) Pantry plus nutritious no-prep, ready-to-eat meals, or 3) Pantry plus $75 grocery vouchers for three-months. The study team will assess improvements in patient food security, diet quality, satisfaction, and wellbeing over time. Results of this pilot will inform the design of a food security response program for patients.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
45
Clients receive food for up to 21 meals per person in the household each month.
12 nutritious no-prep, ready-to-eat meals are provided each month.
A $75 voucher is provided each month and participants are instructed to use the voucher to purchase food or transportation to food retailers.
UT Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas, Texas, United States
Food security
6-item United States Department of Agriculture Food Security Screener (USDA); questionnaire; raw score 0-1-High or marginal food security, 2-4-Low food security, 5-6-Very low food security.
Time frame: 3-months
Patient satisfaction
Satisfaction with clinical experience and interventions; two-items from the HCAHPS (Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) Survey will be used to measure patient satisfaction with the clinical experience - items 21 \& 22 on Overall Rating of Hospital (Q21) and Willingness to Recommend Hospital (Q22) - minimum = 0 (poorer quality care), maximum = 4 (higher quality care).
Time frame: 3-months
Patient wellbeing
The World Health Organisation-Five Well-Being Index (WHO-5), 5-items with 5 response options each, 0 to 25, 0 respresents worst possible quality of life and 25 represents best possible quality of life.
Time frame: 3-months
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