As public health concerns over obesity and diabetes continue to rise, physicians, public health organizations, and medical educators are thinking out of the box — and into the kitchen and grocery store. Two stories done by NPR this week feature programs aimed to increase physician influence in patient dietary choices. The first article describes Wholesome Wave, a program in which a physician writes a “prescription” for fruits and vegetables in the form of a voucher for overweight or diabetic children (and their families). The second article reports on a collaboration between Tulane University School of Medicine and Johnson & Wales University College of Culinary Arts. The hope for the two schools is for both groups of students to learn more about nutrition.
Hearing these two stories reminded me of work I did as a student at the Harvard Legal Services Center, working with the Mississippi Food Policy Council to get food stamps accepted at farmers’ markets and improve access to fruits and vegetables. Most would agree (including Michelle Obama) that providing access to fruits and vegetables in “food deserts” is a laudable goal, but I’m struck by the way in which “prescriptions” for healthy foods versus providing access to healthy food changes the level of autonomy patients have in choosing what they eat.
Couple programs like Wholesome Wave with the ACA’s increased incentives for wellness programs, and I wonder how much a doctor, employer, or insurance plan may dictate consuming that one apple (or bunch of kale) per day. As Professor Matt Lamkin described in his work last year, some employer insurance plans contain high deductibles ($4,400 in the example he describes) that are much lower ($400) if a wellness plan is followed, which often includes following a doctor’s recommendations. In the example Lamkin uses, a patient must choose between continuing unpleasant chemotherapy or paying thousands dollars more to satisfy the obligations of a higher deductible. What if patients want to toss out a doctor’s “prescription” for kale and grab a KitKat instead?
While combating obesity and diabetes is of tantamount importance, how much outside influence over what we eat (or what our children eat) is too much influence? I’m not sure where I come down on this issue, but it gives those of us simultaneously concerned with public health and patient autonomy something to chew on . . .