Too Few Choices, Too Much Junk: Connecting Food & Health Summary

Overview

Summary of the Grantmakers in Health issue brief discussing the intersection of food and health, which focuses on food insecurity, access to healthy food, community food security, and health.

Too Few Choices, Too Much Junk: Connecting Food & Health

Overview

This report discusses the intersection of food and health. The program focused on the current U.S. food system and approaches that foundations can employ to improve food access and nutrition. For many families, food insecurity means having to decide between paying for food and paying for housing, heat, electricity, water, transportation, childcare, or health care.

Boosting the Life Chances of Young Men of Color: Evidence from Promising Programs

How Wages and Working Conditions for California's Food Retail Workers Have Declined as the Industry Has Thrived

Overview

The report shows that while California’s food retail industry has enjoyed consistent growth over the past two decades, the expansion of a low-price, low-cost business model – and the choices that traditional, unionized grocers have made in the face of it – have produced a dramatic wage decline, with high rates of poverty and hunger among workers in a sector that once enjoyed relatively high wages and unionization rates.

Stimulating Supermarket Development in Bi-State Kansas City

Overview

Too many residents of bi-state Kansas City lack sufficient access to healthy, affordable food. Despite being in the heart of one of the richest agricultural regions in the nation, bi-state Kansas City is home to many communities without supermarkets, grocery stores and other retailers of healthy food. Limited access to nutritious food is an issue in specific neighborhoods, such as Douglas Sumner in Kansas City, Kansas, and Ivanhoe and Marlborough in Kansas City, Missouri. To address these concerns, the Kansas City Grocery Access Task Force was convened by KC Healthy Kids, IFF and The Food Trust. The task force is a cohort of leaders from the grocery industry, state and local governments, as well as the community and economic development, public health and civic sectors. The task force developed nine recommendations for state and local public policies that will improve the availability of healthy, affordable food in underserved areas through the development of supermarkets and grocery stores.

Stimulating Supermarket Development in Illinois: Healthier People, Healthier Communities & a Healthier Economy

Overview

This report highlights policy recommendations to stimulate healthy food retail development in Illinois to improve healthy food access in underserved communities throughout the state.

Food Access Market Analysis For Maryland

Overview

In Maryland, limited access to nutritious food is a statewide issue that affects both urban neighborhoods and rural communities. This report addresses the results from a study by The Reinvestment Fund (TRF) aimed at understanding the inequity of access in Maryland and providing a framework for the State as it works to address the issue.

F as in Fat: How Obesity Threatens America's Future 2013

Overview

Each year, the Trust for America's Health (TFAH) and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) issues this report to examine strategies for addressing the obesity crisis. In this 10th edition of the report, TFAH and RWJF included annual rates and rankings of adult obesity and obesity rate trends by region, age, gender, education and income.

Approaches to Healthy Shopping and Eating

Overview

This report examines programs designed to influence individual food choices; presents a summary of evidence-based strategies that encourage healthy shopping and eating habits; and offers recommendations for further research. Given the growth of diet-related diseases as a public health risk in the United States, particularly among poor and minority populations as well as children, many are focused on slowing and reversing this trend. This report, funded by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, seeks to highlight some of the barriers to healthy eating as well as effective intervention strategies to address them.  The Reinvestment Fund summarizes the findings of existing research on healthy food interventions, with a particular focus on intervention strategies that seek to influence an individual’s personal food environment. TRF then highlights programs, or components of programs, that TRF believes have promise.

Food Hub Feasibility Study: Northeast Kansas

Overview

The Douglas County Commission established the DCFPC in 2009 with the goal of strengthening the local food system for farmers, consumers and buyers in the greater Douglas County area. Between 2009 and 2012, the DCFPC worked with key stakeholders to consider strategies to strengthen the local food system. One priority was to investigate the potential for a food hub as a means to accelerate, strengthen and expand the local food system. In October 2013, the DCFPC selected SCALE to lead this examination.

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