RE-AIM evaluation of the first 5 years of a citywide produce prescription program
Grace Hildebrand, Ronli Levi, Sanjana Marpadga, Ximena Perez-Velazco, Hilary Seligman

TL;DR
This study evaluates a 5-year program that gives vouchers for fruits and vegetables to people at risk of food insecurity, showing improvements in food security and diet.
Contribution
The study provides a RE-AIM evaluation of a citywide produce prescription program's impact on food security and diet quality.
Findings
The program reached 9720 participants, 10% of the high-risk population in San Francisco.
Food insecurity decreased and fruit and vegetable intake increased significantly among participants.
High satisfaction was reported by participants, partners, and vendors.
Abstract
Food insecurity and poor diet quality increase risk for diet-related chronic disease and contribute to health disparities. Produce prescription programs (PPPs) are designed to promote chronic disease prevention and treatment by lowering barriers to fruit and vegetable (FV) purchases. In collaboration with a network of distribution partners, Vouchers 4 Veggies (V4V) provides eligible participants with vouchers (“prescriptions”) to purchase fresh or frozen FV at participating vendors. To evaluate the implementation and public health impact of the first 5 years of V4V implementation. Using the RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance) framework, we analyzed quality improvement data collected from program participants, distribution partners, and vendors between 2015 and 2020. Participant outcomes included program engagement, FV intake, food security, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFood Security and Health in Diverse Populations · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Organic Food and Agriculture
