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Phood Farmacy

February 4, 2020

Kroger Is Testing ‘Food as Medicine’ With Food Prescriptions for Customers

Kroger is testing a new concept where doctors can write food prescriptions their patients then fulfill at one of the grocery chain’s stores with the help of a Kroger Health professional, according to an article from Supermarket News.

The pilot launched last spring in Kroger’s hometown of Cincinnati, OH. In its current form, diabetes patients work with a local physician who makes dietary recommendations they can then take to a nutrition expert at a Kroger in Forest Park, OH. The prescription itself is actually just a shopping list of food items that have been tailored to the patient’s specific medical condition.

But as Bridget Wojciak, RDN/LD, a nutrition expert at Kroger, told Supermarket News, the program is much more comprehensive than a shopping list of food items. An in-store dietitian can make recommendations based not only on the food items on the prescription but also around the individual patient’s lifestyle, budget, and skill level when it comes to cooking. 

“We find that a lot of physicians give difficult-to-follow nutrition advice — along the lines of ‘You should improve your diet’ or ‘You should eat better.’ And that becomes very difficult for a patient to understand and implement,” she said, adding that a food prescription is a way to “fill the gap” between a doctor’s recommendations and the actual food customers will take home.

The program also involves using Kroger’s OptUP mobile app, which scores food items in the store based on their nutritional value and lets users track their progress when it comes to improving their diets over time. 

Kroger joins a growing number of companies across the food industry making products and services that address everything from lifestyle choices to dietary habits to chronic illness. Meal kit-like services, such as those from Epicured, are another tactic to getting healthier to consumers’ homes, as is prepared meal delivery from virtual restaurants that focus on food as medicine.

Food prescriptions filled at grocery stores provide a unique and arguably more enticing introduction to the food-as-medicine concept because they can be tailored to an individual’s needs and preferences when it comes to food, cooking, and dietary preferences.

For now, Kroger Health is focused on diabetes patients but could eventually expand to include other conditions, such as cancer and heart disease. And one can easily envision a future where Kroger is able to use its muscle in the grocery delivery area to fulfill food prescriptions and deliver the items to patients who may not be able to leave the house due to illness. 

Nor does the concept and Kroger Health have to be restricted to treating illness. Though rather a broad term, food as medicine can also be as much about preventative care as it is about treating existing illness and chronic disease. Kroger doesn’t yet offer prescriptions for those looking for more preventative food solutions. However, given the chain’s focus of late, which has included launching its own line of plant-based products and putting vertical farms in stores, that day is probably not too far off in the future.

Wojciak will be speaking at Customize, The Spoon’s upcoming daylong summit on food personalization, in just a few weeks in NYC. Grab your tickets to the event here.

February 19, 2019

Project Open Hand Aims to Make Food as Medicine a Key Tenet of Healthcare

Non-profit Project Open Hand (POH) announced today a new CEO and, with that, further plans to expand its mission of treating chronic illness with doctor-recommended foods.

The announcement itself is brief, stating only that the new CEO, Paul Hepfer, M.S., will be “instrumental in continuing to leverage and expand Project Open Hand’s relationships with government partners, health plans and providers, private funders, donors and volunteers.”

But it also puts the spotlight on the many initiatives the San Francisco-based organization has kicked off in the last few years to raise awareness around the larger role food needs to play in healthcare — particularly for underserved individuals.

POH specifically targets critically ill and vulnerable populations in the Bay Area. That includes those in need living with conditions like AIDS/HIV, diabetes, and cancer, as well as elderly and disabled people who don’t necessarily have access to healthy food. The organization started in 1985 as a grassroots response to the AIDs crisis, tackling the negative effects of malnutrition on terminally ill individuals. It has since expanded to include several different initiatives around getting people what it calls “medically tailored meals” — that is, meals built around the specific conditions, medications, and side effects that come with chronic illness.

According to the organization’s site, POH serves over 2,500 meals per day to seniors and persons with disabilities around San Francisco via its Community Nutrition Program, and POH claims access to these meals can lower risk of disease and cognitive decline. Those 60 years and over who are San Francisco residents, and those diagnosed with a disability, can apply. Upon acceptance, they receive hot meals free of charge at one of the participating San Francisco locations.

But it’s the organization’s Wellness Program that gives us a good look at where the food-as-medicine movement is headed. Those individuals who qualify (according to this list) can sign up for the program and get medically tailored meals as well as groceries, both for pickup or delivery. Nutrition counseling is also part of the package. The Wellness Program is different from the Nutrition Program in that it specifically targets those individuals living with illness and disease, including cancer, lupus, diabetes, and HIV/AIDs, among others.

Though it can be easy to be skeptical of the so-called wellness movement, POH has partnered with a number of different researchers, scientists, other not-for-profit groups, and government departments to back up its offerings. It’s also a founding member of the Food is Medicine Coalition, a volunteer association of nonprofit, medically-tailored and nutrition services. It has worked with University of California, San Francisco, to publish data on the health benefits of food as medicine, and the aforementioned Adults With Disabilities meal program is completely funded by The SF Department of Aging and Adult Services (DAAS).

To be clear: POH isn’t telling anyone to ditch their meds in favor of kale. But a growing number of companies, organizations, and government sectors are grasping onto the idea of proper nutrition as preventative care when it comes to illness and disease.

And even those with disposable income who don’t need outside assistance can benefit from the food-as-medicine movement, and the most common way to do that as of right now is through the food-as-medicine sector of the meal kits market. Yes, it will require picking through and bypassing meal delivery plans that seem to care more about your Instagram feed than your health.

But don’t dismay: there are numerous options out there that would qualify as medicinal meal kits. Be Well Eats delivers meal kits to your door compiled by a team of certified nutritionists and holistic health coaches, and led by celebrity chef Tricia Williams and NYC-based Dr. Frank Lipman. Meanwhile, over in Los Angeles, the Phood Farmacy operates a virtual kitchen that delivers “preventative” and “healing” foods to Angelenos.

While both those options would be out of reach financially for POH’s demographic, it’s encouraging to see efforts being made up across the spectrum towards making food a bigger part of the healthcare discussion. Ideally we would one day see a grassroots initiative like Food as Medicine teaming with these higher-end meal kit companies to deliver to a wider swath of the population. Perhaps part of Hepfer’s plans as CEO of POH will include finding ways for non-profits to team up with more consumer-focused companies to make healthier eating easier for all.

January 17, 2019

Phood Farmacy Launches a Food-as-Medicine Virtual Kitchen in Los Angeles

With the wellness movement and demand for food delivery both in full swing, a company called Phood Farmacy has decided to combine the two and launch a new concept: a virtual restaurant for medicinal foods.

According to a press release sent out this morning, Phood Farmacy sells pre-made, farm-fresh food, using “ingredient combinations designed to be preventative and/or healing.” Think lots of acai, leafy greens, fish, and the ubiquitous avocado toast. Menu items cover multiple different diets: chemo, keto, vegan, and gluten-free, to name a few.

It being a virtual restaurant, there’s no in-house dining room for Phood Farmacy. Instead, customers can order single items via Grubhub or the company website, or sign up for a three-day meal kit plan. The latter includes breakfast, lunch, and dinner for three days, as well as snack items, and is completely vegan. Picky eaters, take note: As of right now, it looks like you don’t get to choose individual dishes within the meal kit.

Meal kits as medicine are becoming more of a trend as consumers look to take health back into their own hands and prevent rather than treat illnesses like heart disease and diabetes. Since I’m not a doctor, I won’t try and determine the medicinal value of meal kits and locally grown veggies. However, at SKS 2018 in Seattle last October, Lighter’s CEO, Alexis Fox, told us the story of how Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams more or less reversed Type 2 diabetes by dumping the traditional American diet and switching to a plant-based one. So at the very least, offerings like those from Phood Farmacy could play a role in boosting health, and maybe even preventing some conditions.

Trouble is, medicinal and/or plant-based diets that give you the right amount of calories and nutrients require a lot of planning, particularly if you’ve never done one before. So a virtual kitchen peddling ready-made meals and easy-to-make kits seems like the obvious next step, since it’s providing the kind of convenience and assistance many of us need to make any kind of significant change to our diets.

Phood Farmacy only operates in the Los Angeles area right now. Outside of the City of Angels, you can check out doctor and nutritionist recommended meal kits from the likes of Be Well Eats and BistroMD.

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