Healthcare Partnerships

Medicaid Managed Care

Innovative partnerships with Medicaid Managed Care Organizations - insurance providers - to increase access to meals and federal nutrition programs for families.

Nutrition in Housing

Working alongside Medicaid Managed Care Organizations (such as UnitedHealthcare), affordable housing developers, and community-based organizations, we are improving the food environment in four communities in California, Texas and Georgia. The goal was to establish a sustainable and replicable model to support food security for families with children in affordable housing communities. The model was piloted in four apartment sites: Cleme Manor (Houston, TX), Savannah Gardens (Savannah, GA), Esperanza Crossing (Esparto, CA), and Gleason Park (Stockton, CA). Utilizing a community involved process, the Nutrition in Housing model helped to improve the food environment by co-creating replicable pathways for benefits access (SNAP-EBT) and food access via food delivery programs.

Share Our Strength- No Kid Hungry is thrilled to unveil the findings of our Nutrition in Housing (NIH) pilot evaluation through this micro report. Collaborating with Mercy Housing and NHP Foundation, two of the nation's leading affordable housing organizations, this report showcases the impactful outcomes across three key areas: enhancing food environments, boosting SNAP enrollment and utilization, and improving overall health and well-being. The pilot included innovative strategies such as food delivery initiatives with Instacart Health Fresh Funds and Little Red Box, support for SNAP/EBT enrollment, afterschool youth programs focused on nutrition, community gardens, adult nutrition classes, food pantry expansions including emergency services, and enhanced partnerships with local farmers markets. 

Share Our Strength thanks Instacart, which generously supported our collaboration with our California sites with a philanthropic investment. 

Healthy Families Produce Rx 

Healthy Families Produce Rx is an innovative food access program for Medicaid enrollees, developed in partnership with Aetna Better Health of Louisiana, Share Our Strength’s No Kid Hungry campaign, Vouchers for Veggies, and LSU Ag Center. With funding from the USDA’s Gus Schumacher Nutrition Incentive Grant Program (GusNIP) the program will provide eligible families in six rural Louisiana parishes with $40 per month to purchase fresh fruits and vegetables at select local farmers markets and grocery retailers. The goal of the program is to improve dietary health and food security for families in these communities who are disproportionately impacted by poor nutrition and related health outcomes.