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Delivering food resources and kitchen skills (FoRKS) to adults with food insecurity and hypertension: A pilot study

Rivera RL, Adams M, Dawkins E, Carter A, Zhang X, Tu W, Peña A, Holden RJ, Clark DO
Nutrients

Food insecurity affects nearly 50 million Americans and is linked to cardiovascular disease risk factors and health disparities. The purpose of this single-arm pilot study was to determine the feasibility of a 16-week dietitian-led lifestyle intervention to concurrently address food access, nutrition literacy, cooking skills, and hypertension among safety-net primary care adult patients. The Food Resources and Kitchen Skills (FoRKS) intervention provided nutrition education and support for hypertension self-management, group kitchen skills and cooking classes from a health center teaching kitchen, medically tailored home-delivered meals and meal kits, and a kitchen toolkit. Feasibility and process measures included class attendance rates and satisfaction and social support and self-efficacy toward healthy food behaviors. Outcome measures included food security, blood pressure, diet quality, and weight. Participants (n = 13) were on average {mean (SD)} aged 58.9 ± 4.5 years, 10 were female, and 12 were Black or African American. Attendance averaged 19 of 22 (87.1%) classes and satisfaction was rated as high. Food self-efficacy and food security improved, and blood pressure and weight declined. FoRKS is a promising intervention that warrants further evaluation for its potential to reduce cardiovascular disease risk factors among adults with food insecurity and hypertension.

Rivera RL, Adams M, Dawkins E, et al. Delivering food resources and kitchen skills (FoRKS) to adults with food insecurity and hypertension: a pilot study. Nutrients. 2023;15(6). DOI:10.3390/nu15061452. PMID: 36986184

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Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Social Needs/ SDH
Health & Health Behaviors
Social Determinant of Health
Food/Hunger
Study design
Pre-post without Comparison Group