Geisinger says despite giving away food for free, the program is expected to actually save money by reducing long-term medical costs

Many health care providers nationwide are prescribing food instead of medicine to tackle the obesity epidemic.

Doctors in more than a dozen states are moving away from recommending surgery or pills, and participating in programs that offer healthy food to patients struggling with medical issues related to their weight.

One hospital in central Pennsylvania is taking the effort even further, reports CBS News’ Jan Crawford.

At Geisinger Hospital in central Pennsylvania, food deliveries turn medical professionals into temporary grocers.

It’s all part of a new Fresh Food Pharmacy, now open in the heart of coal country, where shuttered mines have contributed to high unemployment and rising poverty, which has made healthy eating a low priority.  

The program was created by Dr. Andrea Feinberg, Geisinger’s medical director for health and wellness.

“We have a higher incidence of obesity, a higher incidence of diabetes and food insecurity,” Feinberg said. According to Feinberg, the program is offering people hope and a “new way to look at diabetes.”

“There are pockets of communities around the United States where the word has not gotten out that food is really medicine,” she explained.

The pilot program, which started just nine months ago, currently serves more than 60 patients and their families, providing healthy food free of charge to more than 200 people each week along with nutrition classes and cooking advice.

But making a drastic change in diet isn’t easy. Feinberg admits, some people do complain.

“They’re not that excited. First of all we ask them just to be flexible. ‘Try it. You don’t like it, no problem. Come back and tell us, we’ll come up with new recipes,'” Feinberg said.  

Geisinger is one of the first to set up a standalone Food Pharmacy, but it draws inspiration from more than 70 food prescription programs across the country hoping to reverse a frightening trend. 

More than 100 million Americans are either diabetic or pre-diabetic, and the Centers for Disease Control predicts that by the year 2050 one in three adults in the U.S. could have diabetes. 

Rita Perkins has had diabetes for more than 20 years. After enrolling in the Food Pharmacy program in March, 코인카지노 she cut her blood sugar and cholesterol in half.

Perkins said the program is indeed making a difference in her life. How long does she plan to stick with it? “Probably for the rest of my life,” Perkins said.

Feinberg says those results are not unique.

“It’s over-the-top successful,” Feinberg said, telling CBS News it’s worked for “every single patient.”

“We’re talking about reversing the diabetes. Curing the type 2 diabetes and help the patients move themselves from the sick category to the healthy category,” Feinberg said.

Geisinger says despite giving away food for free, the program is expected to actually save money by reducing long-term medical costs. The Fresh Food Pharmacy program has been so successful, they’re already planning to expand — hoping to put similar programs in place at a dozen other locations across Pennsylvania and New Jersey

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Caro Quintero walked free Friday after a federal court overturned his 40-year sentence in agent Enrique “Kiki” Camarena’s kidnapping, torture and murder. The three-judge appeals court in the western state of Jalisco ordered Caro Quintero’s immediate release on procedural grounds after 28 years behind bars, saying he should have originally been prosecuted in state instead of federal court. Also imprisoned in the Camarena case are Ernesto Fonseca Carrillo and Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo, two of the founding fathers of modern Mexican drug trafficking, whose cartel based in the northwestern state of Sinaloa later split into some of Mexico’s largest drug organizations. Fonseca Carrillo’s attorney, Jose Luis Guizar, said his team had filed an appeal based on the same procedural grounds used by Caro Quintero, and expected him to be freed within 15 days by a different court in Jalisco. “The appeal is about to resolved. We believe that the judges will stick to the law,” Guizar said. “Fonseca Carrillo should already on the street. He should be at home. At its base, the issue is the same as Rafael’s. ” He said he had not spoken to Felix Gallardo’s attorneys about their expectations for that case. Mexican officials did not respond to calls seeking comment Saturday. Camarena’s murder escalated tensions between Mexico and the U.S. to perhaps their highest level in recent decades, with the Reagan administration nearly closing the border to exert pressure on a government with deep ties to the drug lords whose cartel operated with near impunity throughout Mexico. The U.S. Department of Justice said Friday that it found the Mexican court’s decision to free Caro Quintero “deeply troubling,” but former DEA agents said they were pessimistic that the Obama administration would bring similar pressure to bear. “We are extremely disappointed,” James Capra, chief of operations for the DEA, told CBS News correspondent Sharyl Attkisson about Caro Quintero, “and more than that, we are angry. We are mad. This is personal. Never did we think this was gonna happen.” Nearly 20 years after the enactment of the North American Free Trade Agreement, U.S.-Mexico trade exceeds $1 billion a day. The two countries have worked closely against drug cartels over the last seven years, with the U.S. sending billions in equipment and training in exchange for wide access to Mexican law-enforcement agencies and intelligence. The U.S. said little last year after Mexican federal police opened fire on a U.S. embassy vehicle, wounding two CIA officers in one of the most serious attacks on U.S. personnel since the Camarena slaying. Twelve police officers were detained in the case but there is no public evidence that the U.S. or Mexico pursued suspicions that the shooting was a deliberate attack by corrupt police working on behalf of organized crime. “I’m sure there’s going to be a lot of complaints about it but do we have a Department of Justice that’s going to stand up for this right now? I don’t think so,” said Edward Heath, who ran the DEA’s Mexico office during the Camarena killing. “Everybody’s happy, businesswise. Trade is fine, everybody is content.”

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