Patient-Reported Outcomes from a Pilot Plant-Based Lifestyle Medicine Program in a Safety-Net Setting

Author:

Massar Rachel E.1ORCID,McMacken Michelle234,Kwok Lorraine1,Joshi Shivam25ORCID,Shah Sapana23,Boas Rebecca234,Ortiz Robin6,Correa Lilian34,Polito-Moller Krisann34,Albert Stephanie L.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Population Health, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY 10016, USA

2. Department of Medicine, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY 10016, USA

3. Department of Medicine, NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue, New York, NY 10016, USA

4. Office of Ambulatory Care and Population Health, NYC Health + Hospitals, New York, NY 10004, USA

5. Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Veterans Affairs, Orlando, FL 32827, USA

6. Departments of Pediatrics and Population Health, Institute for Excellence in Health Equity, NYU Langone Health, New York, NY 10016, USA

Abstract

Lifestyle medicine interventions that emphasize healthy behavior changes are growing in popularity in U.S. health systems. Safety-net healthcare settings that serve low-income and uninsured populations most at risk for lifestyle-related disease are ideal venues for lifestyle medicine interventions. Patient-reported outcomes are important indicators of the efficacy of lifestyle medicine interventions. Past research on patient-reported outcomes of lifestyle medicine interventions has occurred outside of traditional healthcare care settings. In this study, we aimed to assess patient-reported outcomes on nutrition knowledge, barriers to adopting a plant-based diet, food and beverage consumption, lifestyle behaviors, self-rated health, and quality-of-life of participants in a pilot plant-based lifestyle medicine program in an urban safety-net healthcare system. We surveyed participants at three time points (baseline, 3 months, 6 months) to measure change over time. After 6 months of participation in the program, nutrition knowledge increased by 7.2 percentage points, participants reported an average of 2.4 fewer barriers to adopting a plant-based diet, the score on a modified healthful plant-based diet index increased by 5.3 points, physical activity increased by 0.7 days per week while hours of media consumption declined by 0.7 h per day, and the percentage of participants who reported that their quality of sleep was “good” or “very good” increased by 12.2 percentage points. Our findings demonstrate that a lifestyle medicine intervention in a safety-net healthcare setting can achieve significant improvements in patient-reported outcomes. Key lessons for other lifestyle medicine interventions include using a multidisciplinary team; addressing all pillars of lifestyle medicine; and the ability for patients to improve knowledge, barriers, skills, and behaviors with adequate support.

Funder

NYC Health + Hospitals

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

Reference55 articles.

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