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Community clinic
provides uninsured
patients
with fresh, local
foods
A patient in the
OU-HCOM Diabetes
Free Clinic consults
with the Heritage
Community Clinic’s
Tobie Newberry,
C.N.P.
By
Alyse Lorber
Nov. 1, 2011
Balancing
healthcare and
nutrition can be a
difficult task for
some Southeast Ohio
residents. The Ohio
University Heritage
College of
Osteopathic
Medicine’s (OU-HCOM)
Heritage Community
Clinic is working to
address both needs
by providing medical
services as well as
access to healthy,
local foods.
Clinic staff
initiated a food
collection program
in June 2010 after
an encounter with a
patient at the
Diabetes Free
Clinic, a monthly
opportunity for
underinsured or
uninsured patients
with the disease to
get care and
assistance with
medication.
"We noticed one of
our diabetic
patients having
difficulty affording
food," explained
Melissa Kemper,
assistant director
of
Community Health
Programs at
OU-HCOM. "That was a
red flag for us
because making good
food choices and
having access to
fruits, vegetables
and nutritious meals
is one of the most
important pieces of
controlling
diabetes."
Staff began calling
local food banks to
help that patient,
but the effort
quickly turned into
something much
bigger. It sparked
food donation drives
at OU-HCOM that
today are helping
provide members of
the Southeast Ohio
community with not
just food, but
nutrition that can
help improve their
health.
Serving up healthy choices
Fruits, vegetables
and whole grains―the
components of a
healthy
diet―typically come
with a higher price
tag than less
healthy menu items
such as fast or
processed foods. In
Appalachian Ohio,
where poverty rates
are higher than
anywhere else in the
state, that means
it’s not always easy
for residents to put
healthy meals on the
table.
Understanding those
circumstances, and
given the clinic’s
mission to serve
communities in need,
food drives were a
natural step to
take, Kemper said.
The clinic’s
programs, which
range from childhood
immunizations and
obesity prevention
to glaucoma and
blood pressure
screenings, are
offered to uninsured
and underinsured
patients from the
region.
"It’s a perfect fit
for us to promote
healthy eating while
offering services to
improve health," she
said.
In 2010, Kemper and
colleagues began
collecting bags of
non-perishable food
items and offering
them to each
diabetes clinic
patient and other
patients who could
make use of them. A
certified diabetes
educator came up
with a list of foods
that would be
appropriate to give
to diabetes
patients, and
OU-HCOM staff
created healthy
recipes for patients
and tips on how to
prepare the food.
Once the word got
out about the food
collection,
churches, sororities
and local residents
and businesses
joined the effort.
OU-HCOM faculty,
students and staff
often pitch in, for
example, by making
non-perishable foods
required for
admission to holiday
or fundraising
events. The bags,
still given out
today, include
things like canned
fruits and
vegetables, whole
wheat pasta and
bread, tuna, peanut
butter and green
beans.
Dishing out fresh
solutions
In August this
year, the effort
gained more momentum
when clinic staff
began collaborating
with the
Community Food
Initiatives
(CFI), an
organization that
works to expand
access to fresh,
local foods in
Appalachian Ohio.
The new partnership
allowed the clinic
to add locally grown
produce to their
offerings.
"Some people might
never pick up a
butternut squash at
the store," said
Lauren Borovicka,
program coordinator
for the ComCorps
program, "but if we
provide it to them
and give them
information on how
to cook it, they
might see it at the
store and try it
again. Plus, we’re
supporting local
agriculture at the
same time."
ComCorps is an
AmeriCorps program
administered by
OU-HCOM with the
goal of providing
health education
across Athens
County. With
volunteers working
across the county to
increase access to
fresh foods,
Borovicka realized
their efforts would
be valuable at home
in OU-HCOM.
Each Monday,
Kaitlyn Kelly,
AmeriCorps member
and Heritage
Community Clinic
volunteer, picks up
produce from the CFI
donation station,
located at the
Athens Farmer's
Market on East State
Street, and delivers
it to the clinic.
The produce includes
seasonal selections,
such as apples and
root vegetables.
"We’re trying for a
combination of
produce people will
recognize and some
lesser known foods
in order to increase
exposure to
different kinds of
fruits and
vegetables," Kelly
said.
In the past three
months alone, the
clinics have
provided 1,076
pounds of food to
297 community
members.
"We know healthy
eating and diet are
such a huge part of
health," Borovicka
said. "We just want
to reduce barriers
to that as much as
possible.”
You can donate food
to the Heritage
Community Clinic by
contacting Melissa
Kemper at
kemperm@ohio.edu
or 740.593.2567.
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