A feasibility study of the community health worker model for garden-based food systems programming

Authors

  • Maria DeNunzio Virginia Tech https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7698-6732
  • Elena Serrano Virginia Tech and Virginia Cooperative Extension
  • Vivica Kraak Virginia Tech
  • Melissa Chase Virginia Tech
  • Sarah Misyak Virginia Tech and Virginia Cooperative Extension

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5304/jafscd.2023.131.005

Keywords:

community health workers, health equity, food systems programming, feasibility study

Abstract

Underserved communities, including those of Black, Indigenous, and people of color, experience unequal access to food systems resources and pro­gramming. Community health workers are lay pub­lic health workers from underserved communities who provide basic health services and culturally sensitive education while bridging social services and community needs. The objective of this study was to determine if a community health worker model was feasible to deliver garden-based food systems programming with underserved Black, Indigenous, and communities of color for Virginia Cooperative Extension (VCE). Twenty-nine indi­viduals from different programming areas and positions within VCE participated in semi-struc­tured interviews using video-conferencing (Zoom) in 2021. Interviews were coded and ana­lyzed with thematic analysis. The study found that the com­munity health worker model is feasible for garden-based food systems programming for VCE. Themes identified include the fit of the community health worker model for VCE, cultural humility, and logistics. The community health worker model has potential to expand culturally relevant food sys­tems programming and increase inclusion in VCE. Garden-based food systems programming with a community health worker model may create opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration. The community health worker model is fit to advance the community well-being values of VCE through inclusive food systems programming. Food systems community organizations can use this study as a template to evaluate potential new community health worker positions for expansion of inclusive food systems programming.

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Author Biographies

Maria DeNunzio, Virginia Tech

MS; Graduate Research Assistant and PhD Candidate, Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise

Elena Serrano, Virginia Tech and Virginia Cooperative Extension

PhD, Professor and Extension Specialist, Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise; and Director, Virginia Family Nutrition Program (EFNEP and SNAP-Ed), Virginia Cooperative Extension

Vivica Kraak, Virginia Tech

PhD, MS, RDN; Associate Professor, Food and Nutrition Policy, Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise

Melissa Chase, Virginia Tech

PhD; Consumer Food Safety Program Manager, Department of Food Science and Technology

Sarah Misyak, Virginia Tech and Virginia Cooperative Extension

PhD, MPH; Research Assistant Professor, Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise; and Assistant Director and Program Manager for Research and Evaluation, Virginia Family Nutrition Program (EFNEP and SNAP-Ed), Virginia Cooperative Extension

Published

2023-11-06

How to Cite

DeNunzio, M., Serrano, E., Kraak, V., Chase, M., & Misyak, S. (2023). A feasibility study of the community health worker model for garden-based food systems programming. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development, 13(1), 215–233. https://doi.org/10.5304/jafscd.2023.131.005