Community resources help food-insecure kids make fewer ER visits

In a new clinical study published in JAMA Pediatrics, researchers at the University of Chicago Medicine found that a low-intensity program that “prescribes” community resources to every parent or other primary caregiver of a hospitalized child reduced the use of acute care for children of food-insecure families in the following year, saving potentially thousands of dollars in health care expenditures while demanding little more than minutes of staff time per family.

This article was originally published on MedicalXpress.com

You may also be interested in:

Read More:

Lawyers Lookup