Why America’s food-security crisis is a water-security crisis, too
2022-11-20
Deepak Palakshappa became a pediatrician to give poor kids access to good medical care. Still, back in his residency days, the now-associate professor at Wake Forest University School of Medicine in Winston-Salem was shocked to discover that a patient caring for two young grandchildren was food insecure. Our clinic had set up one of those food drive boxes, and near the end of a visit, she asked if she could have any of the cans because she didnt have food for the holidays, he recalls.
Thirteen years later, Palakshappas clinic team now asks two simple questions of every patient to ascertain whether theyll run out of food in a given month. But there are some critical questions they dont ask: Do you drink your tap water? Is it potable and ample? Can you cook food with it, and use it to mix infant formula and cereal? Such questions could uncover some of the millions of Americans who are water insecurea circumstance directly connected to food insecurity.
Theres no healthcare screener for water insecurity. The issue is not even on most public health professionals radar, although recent water disasters in Flint, Michigan, and Jackson, Mississippi, are starting to change that. Clinicians who are aware of water insecurity are thinking, If I screen for this, what am I going to do about
Food & Environment Reporting Network, 20-11-22
; https://thefern.org/2022/11/why-americas-food-security-crisis-is-a-water-security-crisis-too/