| Literature DB >> 36078726 |
Alyssa Auvinen1,2, Mary Simock1, Alyssa Moran2.
Abstract
People with low incomes suffer disproportionately from diet-related chronic diseases and may have fewer resources to manage their diseases. The "food as medicine" movement encourages healthcare systems to address these inequities while controlling escalating healthcare costs by integrating interventions such as produce prescriptions, in which healthcare providers distribute benefits for fruit and vegetable purchases. The purpose of this study was to identify perceived facilitators and barriers for designing and implementing produce prescriptions within the healthcare system. Nineteen semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with experts, and interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis. Overall, interviewees perceived that produce prescriptions could impact patients' diets, food security, disease management, and engagement with the healthcare system, while reducing healthcare costs. Making produce prescriptions convenient to use for patients, while providing resources to program implementers and balancing the priorities of payers, will facilitate program implementation. Integrating produce prescriptions into the healthcare system is feasible but requires program administrators to address implementation barriers such as cost and align complex technology systems (i.e., electronic medical records and benefit/payment processing). Engaging patients, clinics, retailers, and payers in the design phase can improve patient experience with a produce-prescription program; enhance clinic and retail processes enrolling patients and redeeming benefits; and ensure payers can measure outcomes of interest.Entities:
Keywords: chronic disease; food insecurity; healthcare system; nutrition; produce prescriptions
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36078726 PMCID: PMC9518562 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191711010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Description of key-informant sampling.
| Informant Category | Description of | Number of People |
|---|---|---|
| Produce-prescription | Administers a produce-prescription program that is working with, or plans to work with, a state Medicaid agency, Medicaid managed care organization (MCO), or accountable care organization (ACO). Administration includes setting up parameters of a produce-prescription program, coordinating payment and data collection among clinics and healthcare providers that offer produce prescriptions, and setting up systems to redeem produce prescriptions at retail outlets. | 3 |
| Clinician | Provides produce prescriptions to their patients and understands clinic workflow including enrollment procedures for patients into a produce-prescription program, distribution of benefits to patients, clinical data collection and reporting, and reimbursements. | 2 |
| Food retail | Oversees redemption of food benefits at retail outlets, including produce prescriptions and/or other food assistance benefits. | 4 |
| Healthcare law | Understands federal and state Medicaid statutes and programs that may allow produce prescriptions to operate and be reimbursable through Medicaid funds. | 1 |
| Healthcare payer | Serves Medicaid beneficiaries with comprehensive healthcare and social supports and receives funds from state Medicaid programs to cover beneficiaries’ healthcare. | 2 |
| Government | Describes state and federal healthcare and public-health policy, program, and funding mechanisms for produce prescriptions. | 3 |
| Academic | Provides expertise in study designs and data-collection mechanisms that should be considered for evaluating produce-prescription programs. | 2 |
| Advocacy | Provides insight into the political landscape at the federal and state levels for implementing and scaling produce-prescription programs. | 2 |
Description of themes by CFIR domain.
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| Intervention Characteristics | Clinicians, payers, produce-prescription administrators, and researchers viewed programs as improving patient engagement, satisfaction with care, adherence to treatment, and trust in healthcare providers. Clinicians and payers also described produce prescriptions as a financial support mechanism so patients can make health behavior changes. | Facilitator | ||
| Intervention Characteristics | Tying patient eligibility for produce prescriptions to health conditions (e.g., diabetes, pre-diabetes, heart disease) or food-security status was generally viewed as a strategy for reaching the population most likely to benefit, and can be adapted to meet the needs of each implementing site. | Facilitator | ||
| Intervention Characteristics | Respondents from all informant categories described integration of produce prescriptions into electronic medical records and/or retail point-of-sale systems as important, but difficult to implement. | Barrier | ||
| Intervention Characteristics | Respondents described costs to clinicians and payers to implement and evaluate produce prescriptions. Costs included staff time, data needs, and technology | Barrier | ||
| Intervention Characteristics | Advocates, produce-prescription administrators, government stakeholders, payers, and | Barrier | ||
| Outer Setting | Clinicians, payers, and produce prescription administrators described the need to make produce-prescription programs convenient for patients to use. | Facilitator | ||
| Outer Setting | Lawyers, payers, produce-prescription administrators, and government stakeholders described the potential to pay for produce prescriptions with state Medicaid Section 1115 Demonstration Waivers, or through contracting mechanisms with Medicaid managed care | Facilitator | ||
| Inner Setting | Clinicians, payers, government stakeholders, retailers, and program administrators described the need for leadership and staff buy in and enthusiasm for produce-prescription programs, as well as the importance of staff and resource capacity to ensure the program was implemented well. | Barrier | ||
| Inner Setting | Clinicians, retailers, researchers, payers, lawyers, government stakeholders and advocates described the need to equip clinics and retailers with resources for program implementation. | Facilitator | ||
| Process | Clinicians, researchers, government stakeholders, program administrators, lawyers, and payers thought engaging clinics, retailers, and participants in the design phase of a produce-prescription program was important. | Facilitator |