On the menu for the cooking class were sweet potato casserole and smoked turkey collard greens. A chef from MLKCH addressed the assembled group from behind a table laden with fresh vegetables—butternut squash, onions, Swiss chard—and passed out bowls of samples. Murmurs of appreciation filtered through the group as they dug in.
Though it may have appeared to be an ordinary cooking class, this one was part of something much more powerful happening in South LA—a movement for food as medicine. Held in the light-filled cafeteria on the first floor of the hospital, the class is one element of the health system’s innovative Recipe for Health program. Says Lauren Espy, MLKCH’s Director of Equity and Community Programs, “We see patients that tell our doctors that they’re only able to get fast food or unhealthy food options. And we thought, how can we create something that shows food as medicine?”
Lauren looked around the country for the type of healthcare program that would address food insecurity and food access challenges, but found few examples—despite the growing body of research that finds that addressing the root causes of health issues could be just as important as treating those issues with medication. “A lot of our disease truly comes from what we eat and how we live our lives. When you eat well, you feel better,” says Dr. Edward Cardenas, a family medicine doctor at MLKCH.
Recipe for Health was launched as an MLKCH pilot program in March 2019. Doctors from the medical group identify patients struggling with diabetes, heart disease and obesity—both adults and children they believe would benefit from the program. Care coordinators screen the patients for food security and nutritional access. Once patients are accepted into the program, they’re given food vouchers that allow them to arrange for weekly pick-ups of fresh produce. Nutritional coaching and cooking classes enhance the program’s offerings. To date, more than 1,400 patients have participated in Recipe for Health, including the addition of children in 2023.