Litcius/Paper detail

U.S. food policy to address diet-related chronic disease

Emily D. Matthews, Emma L. Kurnat‐Thoma

2024Frontiers in Public Health22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Poor diet is the leading cause of mortality in the U.S. due to the direct relationship with diet-related chronic diseases, disproportionally affects underserved communities, and exacerbates health disparities. Evidence-based policy solutions are greatly needed to foster an equitable and climate-smart food system that improves health, nutrition and reduces chronic disease healthcare costs. To directly address epidemic levels of U.S. diet-related chronic diseases and nutritional health disparities, we conducted a policy analysis, prioritized policy options and implementation strategies, and issued final recommendations for bipartisan consideration in the 2023-24 Farm Bill Reauthorization. Actional recommendations include: sugar-sweetened beverage taxation, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) fruit and vegetable subsidy expansion, replacement of ultra-processed foods (UPF) with sustainable, diverse, climate-smart agriculture and food purchasing options, and implementing "food is medicine."

Topics & Concepts

Food policyChronic diseaseEnvironmental healthSubsidyMedicineAgricultureBusinessSupplemental Nutrition Assistance ProgramPurchasingHealth policyHealth careEconomic growthFood securityPolitical scienceMarketingFood insecurityEconomicsGeographyIntensive care medicineArchaeologyLawConsumer Attitudes and Food LabelingObesity, Physical Activity, DietAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental Impact