Pilot Implementation of a Nutrition-Focused Community-Health-Worker Intervention among Formerly Chronically Homeless Adults in Permanent Supportive Housing

Author:

Hamilton Jane E.1ORCID,Guevara Diana C.1ORCID,Steinfeld Sara F.1,Jose Raina2,Hmaidan Farrah2,Simmons Sarah2,Wong Calvin W.1,Smith Clara2,Thibaudeau-Graczyk Eva3,Sharma Shreela V.1

Affiliation:

1. McGovern Medical School, The University of Texas Health Science Center Houston, Houston, TX 77030, USA

2. Bread of Life, Inc., Houston, TX 77002, USA

3. Temenos, CDC, Houston, TX 77003, USA

Abstract

Food insecurity is a known health equity threat for formerly chronically homeless populations even after they transition into permanent housing. This project utilized a human-centered design methodology to plan and implement a nutrition-focused community-health-worker (CHW) intervention in permanent supportive housing (PSH). The project aimed to increase access to healthy foods, improve nutritional literacy, healthy cooking/eating practices, and build community/social connectedness among 140 PSH residents. Validated food-security screening conducted by CHWs identified low or very low food security among 64% of 83 residents who completed the baseline survey, which is similar to rates found in a previous study among formerly homeless populations placed in PSH. Major themes identified through an analysis of resident feedback include (1) lack of needed kitchenware/appliances for food preparation, (2) knowledge gaps on how to purchase and prepare healthier food, (3) positive perceptions of healthy food options, (4) expanded preferences for healthy, easy-to-prepare foods, (5) regaining cooking skills lost during homelessness, (6) positive experiences participating in group activities, (7) community re-entry, and (8) resident ownership. Preliminary findings suggest the use of a human-centered design methodology for planning and implementing this multi-level CHW intervention helped reduce food insecurity, engaged participants in learning and adopting healthy and safe cooking and eating practices, and fostered social connectedness and feelings of community among formerly chronically homeless PSH residents.

Funder

Houston Methodist Community Benefits program

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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