Does Healthier Food Help Low-Income People Control Their Diabetes?

Researchers find better management of diabetes through nutritious food and education supplied by food pantries

Written byUniversity of California - San Francisco
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To determine whether healthy food could help low-income people better control their diabetes, a pilot study by UC San Francisco and Feeding America tracked nearly 700 people at food banks in California, Texas and Ohio over two years.

The result: better diabetes control and medication adherence and an overall improvement in the consumption of healthy food.  

The research is the first formal evaluation of a diabetes intervention for food insecure people involving the actual provision of food. Food insecurity, a risk factor for poor diabetes control, refers to being at risk of hunger because of the inability to afford nutritious food.

The observational pilot study is now being followed by a more extensive research trial at food banks in Oakland, Detroit and Houston by UCSF and Feeding America.

Related article: Scientists Discover a 'Good' Fat that Fights Diabetes

The paper will be published in the November issue of Health Affairs.

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