Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention in Canada (Jun 2024)

Food prescribing in Canada: evidence, critiques and opportunities

  • Matthew Little,
  • Warren Dodd,
  • Laura Jane Brubacher,
  • Abby Richter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.24095/hpcdp.44.6.04
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44, no. 6
pp. 279 – 283

Abstract

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IntroductionThere is growing interest in food prescriptions, which leverage health care settings to provide patients access to healthy foods through vouchers or food boxes. In this commentary, we draw on our experiences and interest in food prescribing to provide a summary of the current evidence on this intervention model and critically assess its limitations and opportunities. RationaleFood insecurity is an important determinant of health and is associated with compromised dietary adequacy, higher rates of chronic diseases, and higher health service utilization and costs. Aligning with recent discourse on social prescribing and “food is medicine” approaches, food prescribing can empower health care providers to link patients with supports to improve food access and limit barriers to healthy diets. Food prescribing has been shown to improve fruit and vegetable intake and household food insecurity, although impacts on health outcomes are inconclusive. Research on food prescribing in the Canadian context is limited and there is a need to establish evidence of effectiveness and best practices. ConclusionAs food prescribing continues to gain traction in Canada, there is a need to assess the effectiveness, cost-efficiency, limitations and potential paternalism of this intervention model. Further, it is necessary to assess how food prescribing fits into broader social welfare systems that aim to address the underlying determinants of food insecurity.