Helping people lead healthy lives helps all of us

Helping people lead healthy lives helps all of us

In our deeply unequal society, our health depends on our wealth. And one crucial aspect of this relationship is hunger. In 2020, 5.2 million older Americans faced the threat of hunger. That’s 6.8% of U.S. adults age 60+. It’s shocking to think that this is happening in a rich country. We have a moral imperative to eradicate hunger.

I’m optimistic that the upcoming White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition & Health, the first since 1969, will lead to transformational policies that will make nutritious food affordable and accessible. More than 50 years since that historic conference, we have a much larger older population and inflation so high that older adults cannot meet their basic needs.

Good nutrition is the bedrock of a healthy life, and yet, so many older adults go hungry or do not have access to healthy foods because those foods are much more costly. Poor nutrition leads to or worsens chronic conditions like obesity, diabetes, and hypertension. That leads to higher medical cost for both older adults and society, and to lost wages. It pushes people further into poverty and a poor quality of life.

We need to expand eligibility for and increase participation in food assistance programs. Only 48% of older adults who qualify are enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program SNAP. We also need to increase SNAP benefits permanently, as the current level of benefits does not cover the cost of adequate amounts of nutritious food like fresh vegetables.

If the moral imperative of eradicating hunger in a country as rich as ours is not enough, we need to understand that we all lose when those most vulnerable among us lose. When hunger and malnutrition hit, you end up with aggravated chronic conditions, which can mean missing out on a good, productive life, and ending up far too sick. Then, as a society we ALL pay for that higher health care cost.

Integrating nutrition and health is the next step to ensure more of us can age well. We know 43% of older adults are living with obesity, compared to 24% just three decades ago. Chronic diseases such as obesity?disproportionately impact communities of color.?

We also need to make it easier for older adults to be physically active, which is crucial to almost all facets of aging well. Physical activity improves mood, reduces anxiety, improves sleep quality, prevents falls, and helps manage chronic conditions.

Senior centers and other community-based organizations are great resources for physical activity. Yet most U.S. rural counties lack access to critical programs for falls prevention, disease self-management, and physical activity.

The White House conference must commit to addressing poverty-related hunger and its root causes as well as health equity and food literacy. It needs to amplify the voices of older adults with lived experience in hunger, poverty, and nutrition program participation in meaningful ways.

The conference also needs to build bipartisan support for a national plan to end hunger and improve nutrition security in America by 2030.

Anurag Bansal

Managing Director @ 13D Research & Strategy | Author, Thought Leader

2 年

This was such an insightful read. Thanks Ramsey Alwin

Jennifer L. Crawley

Leader, Collaborator, Advocate

2 年

It’s essential to review and revise the Older Americans Act nutrition funding to reflect today’s vast nutrition options and broaden the way local Area Agencies on Aging can impact food equity and insecurity across local communities.

Tim Conroy, PhD

Vice President | Medicaid and State Government Programs

2 年

Great work here thank you.

Raji Ramanan ACC, SHRM-SCP?,CHRE, GPHR,

Global HR Leader I ICF certified Executive Leadership Coach I Career Accelerator I OD Consultant I Team Effectiveness Facilitator

2 年

Absolutely a great cause Ramsey Alwin May your #Optimism make a mark and win through these tough times.

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