Role of Effective Policy and Screening in Managing Pediatric Nutritional Insecurity as the Most Important Social Determinant of Health Influencing Health Outcomes.
Hema VermaArun VermaJeffery M BettagSree KolliKento KurashimaChandrashekhara ManithodyAjay JainPublished in: Nutrients (2023)
Social Determinants of Health (SDOH) impact nearly half of health outcomes, surpassing the influence of human behavior, clinical care, and the physical environment. SDOH has five domains: Economic Stability, Education Access and Quality, Health Care Access and Quality, Neighborhood and Built Environment, and Social and Community Context. Any adversity arising out of these interlinked domains predominantly affects children due to their greater susceptibility, and the adverse outcomes may span generations. Unfavorable SDOH may cause food insecurity, malnutrition, unbalanced gut microbiome, acute and chronic illnesses, inadequate education, unemployment, and lower life expectancy. Systematic screening by health care workers and physicians utilizing currently available tools and questionnaires can identify children susceptible to adverse childhood experiences, but there is a deficiency with respect to streamlined approach and institutional support. Additionally, current ameliorating supplemental food programs fall short of pediatric nutritional requirements. We propose a nutrition-based Surveillance, Screening, Referral, and Reevaluation (SSRR) plan encompassing a holistic approach to SDOH with a core emphasis on food insecurity, coupled with standardizing outcome-based interventions. We also propose more inclusive use of Food Prescription Programs, tailored to individual children's needs, with emphasis on education and access to healthy food.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- mental health
- public health
- physical activity
- quality improvement
- young adults
- primary care
- health information
- human health
- emergency department
- risk assessment
- palliative care
- childhood cancer
- drug induced
- smoking cessation
- climate change
- respiratory failure
- rare case
- aortic dissection
- hepatitis b virus
- health promotion
- social media