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Identifying nutrition risk in a charitable pharmacy population

B.E. Collier, A.C. Felmer, J.M. Mirtallo, S.M. Jones, J.L. Seifert
J Health Care Poor Underserved

While prior research has shown that food insecurity and malnutrition worsen health outcomes and increase health care costs, nutrition risk is rarely assessed in the community setting. Tools exist to screen for food insecurity and malnutrition individually, but none screen for both. This study aimed to implement a dual-purpose screening tool to identify nutrition risk in a community setting, to characterize nutrition risk in a charitable pharmacy population, and to identify patients who screen positive for nutrition risk and connect them to community nutrition resources. Of the 221 patients screened during their initial and annual qualification interview at the Charitable Pharmacy of Central Ohio, 140 (63%) screened positive for nutrition risk. There were 84 (38%) patients positive for food insecurity, 14 (6%) positive for malnutrition risk, and 42 (19%) positive for both. Patients at nutrition risk were referred to nutrition resources, including food pantries, home-delivered meals, and SNAP.

Collier BE, Felmer AC, Mirtallo JM, Jones SM, Seifert JL. Identifying Nutrition Risk in a Charitable Pharmacy Population. Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved. 2021;32(3):1493-1513. doi:10.1353/hpu.2021.0146

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Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Process
Screening research
Yes
Social Determinant of Health
Food/Hunger
Study design
Other Study Design