[2026] Sue Daugherty, CEO of MANNA, talks about medical coverage for medically tailored meals.
00:00 - The following program is sponsored in part by
00:04 - customer's bank.
00:15 - Sue daugherty chief executive officer of an organization called mana m a n n a
00:22 - a psu what do you do there.
00:25 - Theo at nine am i am also a
00:28 - registered dietitian nutritionist so started a long long time ago.
00:33 - So
00:33 - tell our viewers just what man does exactly.
00:37 - Sure so we're all about food as medicine right
00:39 - so often people get discharged from the hospital
00:42 - and they get discharged
00:44 - or medications they get insurance but we're going to go for chemo or.
00:48 - Radiation and all of these instructions are provided for them and many many times
00:53 - there's also a diet that is prescribed at discharge that
00:56 - isn't a
00:57 - that
00:57 - though you know you need to eat more fruits and
00:59 - vegetable it can be really complex diet such as
01:02 - you need to go follower for gram potassium for granted phosphorus two grams sodium
01:06 - two thousand cc fluid restricted diet right
01:09 - as a dietitian that would be really complicated
01:11 - for me to follow much less someone
01:13 - who hasn't had any.
01:15 - Education in this so
01:17 - it's a really complex problem
01:19 - an appetite efficient I've been there first hand many times when you know I'll date
01:23 - myself a little bit with my pager used to go often i was
01:26 - called to a patient's room
01:28 - and they're
01:29 - getting ready to walk out the door and someone realizes oh wait is this special diet
01:33 - i mean like contact the dietitian and
01:35 - you know the person sitting there with their coat on and the person who's going to
01:38 - take them home and that's certainly not an appropriate time to
01:42 - to go into that but what that does is we kind of see ourselves as the pharmacy for
01:46 - prescription diet so just as you would go
01:48 - to a pharmacy to
01:49 - pick up your medication magnetics
01:51 - conference medically tailored meal was to
01:54 - make sure that it needs to the needs of all different illnesses i think last year we
01:57 - touched over eighty five different illnesses
02:00 - so at no cost declines that were serving we show off and we deliberate complete
02:04 - nutrition you know three meals a day seven days a week
02:06 - we either deliver it through a temperature controlled trumpet and then we also have
02:10 - shipping
02:11 - options that we
02:12 - touch all all
02:13 - the state of Pennsylvania for shipping mode
02:16 - and so before we dig into more details about the services provided by mana
02:21 - let's explore a phrase you used just a minute ago and it appears on your website
02:25 - as a headline as well
02:26 - power of food
02:28 - as
02:28 - medicine and just tell us why that's so
02:31 - important within
02:32 - the context of this discuss Russian today.
02:35 - So it's so important because it really is treatment
02:38 - right so
02:39 - often we kind of get put into the bucket
02:41 - of food access and food insecurity which is all
02:44 - very important issues
02:46 - and often the folks that we are serving do have issues with food access but we
02:51 - that is not really our lame
02:53 - mere really in that treatment space just as i mentioned Ryan.
02:57 - Reno was the temporary complex
02:59 - i think often people
03:01 - understand diabetes but you have to follow a certain diet
03:04 - but that exists with congestive heart failure and multiple
03:07 - layers of illnesses and so
03:09 - if you're prescribed with somebody medication and then
03:12 - person is a
03:13 - you know
03:13 - having access the right nutrition in
03:16 - new setting that patient up for success so we really
03:19 - know the power of food is medicine really is you know.
03:22 - In that treatment space and one of the things that I've often referenced is
03:26 - if you get admitted to a hospital right
03:29 - they will not send you are a tray of food until that prescribed diet
03:32 - into the system so it
03:34 - is
03:34 - in healthcare it is viewed as treatment but
03:37 - there's some disconnect when people leave the hospital
03:40 - about how folks are going to get access to that
03:42 - as soon as i did research for this interview
03:45 - on your website i came across the phrase
03:47 - medically tailored
03:48 - diet
03:49 - quite a few times and i'd never heard it before so
03:51 - just talk about
03:53 - how that phrase was coined and what it means.
03:56 - Sure so
03:57 - it is it's
03:58 - complicated writing it and i'm going to back up just a little bit because even
04:02 - a term
04:03 - that the role of the dietitian
04:05 - i think that's complex right
04:07 - anyone there's no
04:08 - credentials required to take your nutrition
04:10 - nutritionist race so often people are getting
04:13 - advice and folks are saying well i'm a nutritionist a dieting she is a credential you
04:17 - know six year degree we have to continue in education
04:21 - so even when i worked in the healthcare system no i wouldn't walk into a patient's
04:24 - room and i would if i said hi i'm sue your dietitian and they kind of look at me like
04:28 - oh no but if i said hey i'm seeing a nutritionist
04:30 - people get the nutrition Israel but
04:33 - you have a lot of complexities and this thing
04:35 - with the diet right so when someone has a
04:38 - congestive heart failure diagnosis right in there swollen and
04:42 - retaining fluid well sodium is going to contribute and worse than that
04:46 - i often tell a story even
04:49 - with my mom back in two thousand and seventeen as she was very sick with a new
04:53 - diagnosis of congestive heart failure
04:56 - got this charge or if her daughter is a dietitian right work and nutrition center and
05:00 - i'm like oh i got this right i can make sure she's eating correctly and for two weeks
05:05 - we were really struggling and then finally
05:07 - the director of nutrition at mammoth and
05:09 - why is your mom now mana right and i was
05:11 - like right why is she not in on it and it was
05:14 - a game-changer night and day within a week or food stabilized
05:18 - and she was able to bring
05:20 - back veteran no shortness of breath and that's what we hear from her patients
05:23 - over and over again
05:25 - it is very stressful
05:27 - when you're often diagnosed with a new eye
05:30 - issue and you have all these things going on and then you're
05:33 - you're told you have to follow this special diet and
05:36 - often one you don't even have access to even.
05:39 - Opera vu
05:40 - and much less the complexities of wiring
05:43 - you know how much sodium how much potassium how much phosphorus right how much
05:47 - of what i can have.
05:49 - Well i'm sorry to hear about your mom's situation
05:51 - but it sounds like you were able to observe
05:54 - very real results and how soon did they come.
05:57 - Within two weeks
05:59 - and we have data so at night if we have
06:02 - division and not a club about it institute which is a research and evaluation arm
06:06 - and we have
06:07 - we have got it there has been multiple.
06:10 - Much more data out there since
06:12 - we were the first to publish
06:14 - results in two thousand and.
06:16 - Thirteen that showed the impact of receiving
06:18 - them medically to me on nutrition education
06:20 - not only the impact that it has on health.
06:23 - Outcomes right better health outcomes but the significant reduction it has on health
06:27 - care costs and so to me this is a win win intervention right people do better and
06:32 - we're saving the healthcare system significant dollars
06:35 - now you've already mentioned a few illnesses that can benefit from a medically
06:39 - tailored diet but
06:40 - go over short less slower forests in other words
06:43 - what illness has made you maintain the less there that
06:46 - and you know immediately when you go over a list you go this person
06:49 - can benefit from our sir services
06:51 - what what kind of illnesses are we talking about
06:55 - but certainly you know obviously the top five illnesses
06:57 - that we're serving are all types of cancer right people
07:01 - optimal coverage wasn't the newly diagnosed cancer
07:03 - and again even within cancer renegade how you're being treated for cancer
07:08 - there can be a whole complexity of different needs that you know
07:11 - love your breast cancer
07:12 - institute nci cancer
07:14 - and we serve people with HIV and aids
07:16 - we serve people with diabetes
07:19 - and
07:19 - heart disease is another one that again congestive heart failure
07:23 - and
07:24 - often so sometimes people come cells also post surgery
07:27 - surgery right so maybe that you're going to acute need.
07:30 - A room key they're right that's another big area that if if you have
07:34 - a woman
07:35 - that is not healing and you don't have proper nutrition.
07:38 - That was not going to heal without that
07:40 - so and
07:41 - the other area that i think is really complex
07:44 - specifically with the population that we're serving is
07:47 - often several men come to us because maybe they just received a new diagnosis
07:51 - you know breast cancer but upon intake right our intake specialists are reviewing
07:56 - their health you know background and we find out
07:59 - oh they
08:00 - may also have high blood pressure and they may also have diabetes
08:03 - so now we're getting but.
08:05 - Comorbidity
08:06 - but now that
08:06 - we have eleven different diet modifications that
08:09 - we have the ability we can layer all the diff aren't
08:12 - modifications to make sure we're treating all those
08:14 - co-morbidities not just the primary diagnosis.
08:18 - So explain how
08:20 - your patients can connect with men or in other words it
08:23 - strikes me that someone could be discharged from the hospital
08:26 - and then they have certain instructions when they go home to recover
08:29 - so who makes the connection with mana in order to
08:31 - follow through with that service that the patient might not even know about.
08:35 - Yeah so we got we get referrals from all different walk of life i wish we actually
08:40 - had caught more referrals at discharge
08:42 - but
08:43 - most often a lot of times our referrals will come from other dietitians specifically
08:47 - dialysis centers we get a lot of referrals from
08:49 - dialysis centers
08:51 - they also obviously get self referrals right so people will see our trucks
08:55 - you know out on the road or.
08:57 - You have a you know work fortunate enough to.
08:59 - Be depressed or get some attention people will sometimes self reach out to us
09:04 - i should also point out that
09:06 - one of the i think.
09:07 - Amazing guests from our program is not only do we provide
09:11 - meals for the individual and education to the individual
09:14 - but if there are children in the household under the age of eighteen or are there is
09:18 - elderly
09:19 - and
09:20 - living with the individual make sure that we provide meals for the
09:24 - household
09:25 - we learned a long long time ago that you cannot show up and deliver meals
09:29 - so a mom who's go about
09:30 - going through chemo or radiation but she has three small children in the household
09:35 - and maybe they don't have access to
09:37 - food that she wouldn't share that right and so we
09:40 - want the
09:41 - patient to get the full impact of our intervention and so we we want to make sure
09:45 - that everybody in that household is taking care of
09:47 - well let me put it this way soo other cases where doctors will say to the patient
09:52 - i know what you need i want you to connect with this organization called mana
09:55 - and they can help you.
09:57 - Yeah we definitely get doctors
09:59 - refer and we have a referral portal so referrals can come in online on
10:03 - that not a ph
10:03 - or
10:05 - but
10:06 - we we wish
10:07 - we wish we had more
10:08 - of the healthcare if you referring to last but i think more
10:11 - you know what we hear often from health healthcare systems is that
10:15 - you know.
10:17 - They're so bogged down with so many is
10:19 - we're going on and if they don't know out man and
10:22 - we are we're
10:23 - an accredited medical
10:25 - meal provider and
10:26 - that means.
10:28 - We're part of the food is medicine coalition which is
10:30 - a national association
10:32 - really the first
10:33 - in the country that to push this
10:35 - in
10:35 - this space forward
10:37 - and there's
10:38 - you know as you
10:39 - that there's a lot of you know terms and people
10:42 - saying food is medicine food as medicine and
10:44 - you can actually mean
10:46 - and so the fact that we are an accredited medically
10:48 - tailored meal provider and you can actually
10:50 - go on picnics website and see the standards that were held to
10:53 - make sure that we are providing
10:55 - exactly what we're saying we're providing cause there's
10:58 - there's other people in that space right now that
11:00 - are claiming to provide medically tailored meals
11:02 - but they're they're not really medically tailored
11:05 - so in Pennsylvania amount is the only accredited
11:07 - medically tailored meal provider and so
11:10 - it's really important that folks understand that
11:13 - if
11:13 - you need a you know.
11:16 - Restricted phosphorus diet
11:17 - that you're getting that and so are a recipe please
11:20 - go through a rigorous nutritional
11:23 - and analysis and you know the quality products we use and and so forth
11:28 - let's take a look at men as services from
11:30 - the perspective of the patient or the client.
11:34 - In other words what does a typical day look for
11:36 - them look like to them as far as the services go
11:39 - another way words
11:40 - can patients expect
11:42 - three square meals a day.
11:44 - Yes they can so
11:46 - now you get a once a week delivery right we have
11:48 - really excited cause we recently this
11:51 - year
11:51 - launched a client choice portal
11:54 - so patients will get a text
11:56 - message
11:57 - reminding them and if they don't use
11:58 - cell phones or so forth are made can call in our intake
12:01 - specialists to walk through the process with them
12:03 - but they can select raise a different
12:06 - dinner on chains that they like now there are only thing no
12:09 - ones that are appropriate for their diet right so it's not like a free for all.
12:14 - Been so negative text alert days let the choices that they want for a week
12:19 - on everything is made on
12:20 - saying
12:21 - we have a state of the art watching facility where a volunteer driven organization so
12:25 - i got a shout out our volunteers cause we couldn't do what we do without them
12:29 - but everything's made on site last show
12:31 - and then we deliver to our patients once a week so once a week they will receive
12:36 - twenty one twenty one meals breakfast lunch and dinner.
12:39 - If for some reason you know they don't want the twenty
12:41 - one meal option we do have and other options that fourteen
12:44 - or Saturday ones but
12:45 - our standard is the twenty one meals
12:47 - and is there an established meal regimen for a particular kind of sickness in other
12:52 - words to tried to pick out a sickness
12:54 - and tell me what you wouldn't feed that person.
12:58 - So certainly someone who's going through cancer
13:01 - often write their appetite is impacted
13:04 - so for those folks we we want to really do nutrient dense race so smaller fortunes
13:10 - but high
13:11 - density of nutrition rice that we can
13:13 - pack a lot of protein a lot of
13:15 - good calories into small portion so there
13:18 - there
13:18 - he's going to
13:19 - be different than someone
13:20 - grabbed a high calorie diet
13:23 - with a cancer diagnosis because of your appetite is so
13:26 - poorly.
13:27 - So
13:28 - impacted that
13:29 - often we
13:30 - know that smells can be associated with you know
13:33 - if you're not feeling while you didn't have an appetite
13:36 - you don't really want to smell something right and so we
13:39 - need when we're designing that.
13:41 - Recipes food for
13:43 - those.
13:44 - Meals we really considered that bike when you reheat
13:46 - it right but we don't want to give off a strong
13:48 - odor.
13:50 - That certainly you know with our cancer population and certainly
13:52 - people with diabetes
13:54 - carbohydrates are a big deal so
13:56 - you know we limit their carbohydrates and.
13:59 - People with raynaud's disease potassium is a big deal right so they can't have
14:02 - potatoes so it really is complex and really goes into the
14:07 - individual layers of all those different nutritional needs
14:10 - aware his men are located too and more importantly what is your service area.
14:15 - Yeah so we're located right in center city Philadelphia
14:19 - but we service all of Pennsylvania
14:21 - as i said
14:22 - around Philadelphia we have a
14:23 - temperature controlled trucks
14:25 - and we partner with fedex
14:26 - and we've touched all the counties in Pennsylvania
14:29 - so any to research initiative says honestly we've
14:31 - we've shipped our meals all across the country
14:33 - and just how busy are you kept sue in a big city like Philadelphia.
14:38 - We're busy right so we are kitchen opens up about six in the morning and
14:42 - cook anyway so
14:44 - about six at night
14:45 - and as i said we have volunteer shifts off
14:47 - that day that started at seven in the morning.
14:50 - We have individual volunteers that come in and we have
14:52 - corporate groups that come in you know we it's it's a
14:56 - it's a it's a pretty.
14:57 - Fun and happy place to be i say everyday i start my day where i
15:01 - go get my cup of tea coffee
15:03 - and
15:03 - coffee stations all around that's very important but i walk through the kitchen and
15:08 - just take time to chat with the volunteers because
15:10 - we have some volunteers honestly have not been volunteering with us for where
15:14 - we're celebrating our thirty six year.
15:17 - We started as an HIV aids organization and so have obviously evolved beyond that but
15:23 - you know you have some art war volunteers there
15:25 - yeah i can see rely on your volunteer network so
15:28 - is there anybody on staff that gets paid for their services.
15:32 - Yes we have about a staff of about fifty five individuals yeah.
15:36 - Issues
15:37 - so what are their skills what are they doing.
15:40 - Yeah so we definitely
15:42 - that's very efficient i should talk about it more but we
15:44 - definitely have a team of registered dietitians that are
15:46 - providing education race and not only are we providing the product
15:50 - or providing education so that hopefully when they achieve optimal health
15:54 - it can come off our program it and sustain that not
15:56 - and then we have
15:57 - very talented chefs
15:59 - that was mostly i
16:00 - always say at the dietitians at one side of the
16:02 - table yep it's just that the other side of the table
16:05 - and the dietitians are talking about an macro and micro nutrients and the chefs who
16:08 - are saying well if it doesn't taste good they're not going to eat it right
16:11 - so really at the end of the day they they work really hard and combine those efforts
16:15 - and i think we have a product that
16:17 - meets those nutritional needs but also tastes really well and then
16:20 - obviously we can't do what we do without money
16:23 - so we have fund raising
16:24 - at Nana.
16:26 - We have a lot of special events throughout the year and obviously write grants and
16:30 - receive funding
16:31 - and then because of that research will be
16:32 - published back in two thousand and thirteen.
16:36 - We weren't we are the first org innovation in the country
16:38 - that signed a contract with
16:41 - medicaid medicaid and an insurance provider
16:44 - that actually for the first time
16:46 - will treat a prescribed diet
16:48 - just say they will
16:50 - treat any other prescribed or
16:51 - non intervention
16:52 - so they actually reimburse us
16:54 - and so because of that we obviously have to have
16:57 - a film anglia are hipaa compliant and and so forth
17:00 - osu i'm glad you brought up fund raising the alarm
17:03 - to go cause i know some of our viewers are wondering.
17:06 - When meals are delivered to patients or clients
17:09 - what is the cost to them.
17:12 - Yeah no cost to the individuals.
17:15 - And so tell me more than about your funding network and
17:19 - how you can
17:20 - make this mission continue.
17:23 - So it's a lot of asking people for money right so obviously we have individual donors
17:28 - who have been very generous to us.
17:30 - We also have.
17:32 - A grants department so we raised
17:34 - significant funding for corporate foundation
17:37 - of partnerships we
17:39 - as i mentioned we have events all throughout the year one of our biggest events is
17:43 - something called pie in the sky which i always just think is funny because
17:46 - when i'm out and about and talking to
17:48 - people about you know
17:49 - meeting people in Israel where do you work and i'm like oh i work for this incredible
17:53 - organization nine and they always go
17:55 - oh you're the pie people which is definitely.
17:58 - Not figured as medicine and then through our insurance reimbursement on about twenty
18:04 - percent of our funding comes through
18:06 - reimbursement for our contracts with the medicaid providers.
18:10 - So do you have any data that would show how mana
18:13 - takes the edge off of
18:15 - health care costs we all know health care costs just keep rising.
18:19 - Yeah so yeah it's not it has data that has been published
18:23 - and it has shown that we can
18:25 - our research showed that
18:26 - you can save anywhere from.
18:28 - Twenty seven to thirty three per sent
18:30 - remember per month
18:32 - right which is a lot of money
18:34 - and toughs
18:35 - research just came out on a national level
18:38 - and it was projected that after if everyone who was prescribed automatically powered
18:42 - meal after the cost of the intervention
18:46 - Pennsylvania i believe ranked second and the highest savings that
18:49 - i ain't about
18:50 - plus the five thousand.
18:52 - Are patient.
18:53 - Savings after the costs of that intervention over the course of a year or so
18:58 - to me this is like
18:59 - a no brainer right people are do better
19:02 - and we save
19:03 - significant healthcare costs and
19:05 - so
19:06 - we've been doing for many many years is advocating right that when people are
19:09 - prescribed these complex diets that that should be part
19:12 - of treatment and it should be a mandated coverage benefit.
19:15 - So one more question before we get into legislation that may
19:19 - help
19:20 - mana in the future and certainly affect the
19:23 - clients and patients
19:24 - and this has to do with hard evidence out there that
19:28 - your approach to nutrition for sick people
19:30 - really works outside your personal experience
19:33 - with your mom
19:34 - what's been documented.
19:36 - Oh
19:37 - there is no if you were to go into the food is medicine coalition website there is
19:42 - research that's coming out from all across the country right that has shown.
19:46 - That support not as research right we were the first but there's been much much
19:50 - much documented evidence
19:52 - if that's your thing because i think that at the federal level will be some kind of
19:55 - this ongoing debate is like weed need more research
19:58 - and it's like well
19:59 - you know how much more research
20:00 - there's a lot of research that has been done
20:02 - certainly and diabetes certainly i was saying cancer
20:05 - so maybe there's
20:06 - more research that needs to be done you know we're we're really excited we just
20:09 - partnered with chop we're actually doing research
20:12 - with that
20:13 - pediatric cancer population which i don't think
20:16 - that's been booked
20:17 - right
20:18 - so but all the data right
20:20 - so porous
20:22 - cost savings better health outcomes and so
20:25 - and and tough i would say it has been
20:27 - a leader pretty much in
20:28 - the
20:28 - research states but it's been cited numerous times
20:31 - at many many levels all right now let's get into
20:34 - legislation that could affect the future of
20:38 - and this has to do with the pa house
20:40 - has plans to introduce a bill
20:42 - that would help pay for medically
20:44 - tailored meals
20:46 - tell us what you know about the bill.
20:48 - Yeah so certainly i buy
20:50 - my party things that weren't right we've been
20:53 - going to Harrisburg and spending lots of time.
20:56 - Talking about food
20:57 - medicine and medical
20:58 - bills and so
21:00 - often i think where
21:01 - you know the conversations get stuck is
21:04 - i think people once they see their research and they see the data.
21:08 - I think
21:08 - p people can have
21:10 - all kind of get on the same page like yes of course this this should be
21:13 - you know something that should be supported and should be paid for
21:16 - but because we're so unique right it's often people don't know
21:20 - how to do that
21:22 - and felt this would be you know
21:24 - what legislation that would
21:26 - fit and medically tailored meals right and give it a space then
21:30 - insurance companies you know
21:32 - can bill for it
21:33 - just like they would be and bill for the exact
21:35 - service right right now when they're working with us
21:38 - like
21:39 - pulling things together like home delivered
21:41 - meals right there's just nothing that really
21:43 - meets that
21:44 - that niche of what we do which is specialized medically tailored meals so we're
21:48 - really ex say that right we've met with both representative
21:51 - michalek and and Colorado sky and you know
21:54 - and they've been you know it
21:56 - represented mahal ang eventually i
21:58 - not join me but she was
22:00 - at a conference up in Boston about food as medicine
22:02 - so i know that there's a lot of interest in this space
22:05 - and i think that this could be a real big win for Pennsylvania right to be a leader
22:09 - show yeah people can prescribe these conflicts diet let's
22:12 - let's make sure this is
22:14 - a mandated
22:15 - benefit that is accessible for all
22:17 - you mentioned representatives cars are asking the hail it
22:20 - a minute ago
22:21 - i wonder if they have any personal involvement.
22:24 - In this bill or medically tailored meals
22:27 - in general.
22:29 - Yeah yeah i mean i know certainly when we've met with them they're very interested i
22:33 - know that they're co-sponsors right on this bill
22:35 - day and
22:36 - you know.
22:38 - I think
22:39 - like a champion and i you know and we get
22:42 - i think
22:43 - certainly the impact on health
22:45 - outcomes and the reduction in healthcare costs
22:48 - and so i know what we've met with them in
22:50 - their offices they definitely been champions
22:52 - and leaders and
22:53 - you know i know certainly.
22:56 - This has come up at budget hearings recently so i
22:58 - think there's a lot of interest in moving a sport
23:01 - now i understand the prescriptions would play a role here
23:04 - does that mean a doctor's writing a prescription for a medically tailored meal.
23:09 - Yeah so it's interesting cause i
23:11 - i
23:11 - think i was touching on this earlier in our conversation right like when you go into
23:15 - the hospital no one can bring you any food and often if the doctor i
23:19 - saw on healthcare systems that allow dieticians
23:21 - i would argue it should be a dietician
23:23 - by a healthcare provider what have have to write prescription right business and
23:28 - you know
23:28 - again i think
23:29 - often when I've been talking to policymakers right
23:32 - i think often they think i'm here to talk about
23:35 - food access that's right our food benefit if
23:38 - i and
23:38 - again all of those things are very important
23:41 - but this is really treatment so this is not for everyone i
23:44 - often as the five percent is costing the healthcare system
23:47 - fifty percent of the healthcare costs right so
23:50 - this is a prescribed intervention for a population
23:54 - that needs a specialized diet
23:56 - get.
23:57 - Outcomes for their diagnosis so how are doctors responding to the prospect of
24:02 - having to write prescriptions for meals.
24:05 - I think that they're used to doing it right.
24:08 - Already doing it up.
24:10 - There often be right there often things especially like saying
24:13 - you know if you have a diet
24:14 - that diabetes your you know doctors telling
24:16 - you you have to before your carbohydrates so
24:19 - i think this is just moving it from.
24:22 - People recognizing that
24:24 - the diet is
24:24 - important but then
24:26 - how do people
24:27 - get access to that right how how do folks get access to that prescribed diet.
24:33 - Now whenever legislation comes up with this nature it
24:36 - seems that it introduces a new level of transparency.
24:40 - So how does the bill make sure that
24:43 - medically tailored meals are going
24:45 - to qualified
24:46 - patients.
24:48 - Yeah so i don't
24:50 - i don't know all the details but i think what they
24:52 - will be putting in there is metrics around right
24:55 - Cochran certain.
24:57 - Certain diagnoses that would match right this
24:59 - sprite diet
25:00 - and then i noticed that anyone we've talked with a bunch
25:03 - of folks up in Harrisburg Knoxville i need to focus on
25:05 - who are we talking about right and i who
25:07 - who needs these services
25:09 - and it really is ray
25:11 - oak that you know
25:12 - have a
25:13 - cancer diagnosis then again the other thing that i think is really important.
25:17 - Because this topic comes up a lot right as
25:20 - you know i think something that people are worried that there's going to be.
25:24 - You know abuse or
25:26 - your people are you know
25:27 - isn't going to be a free for all all
25:29 - i can stay into
25:31 - all the harder
25:32 - he is
25:33 - you know we serve thousands and thousands of patients throughout a year
25:36 - and
25:37 - no one
25:38 - wants to be on our services
25:40 - right and
25:41 - as i mentioned there's not
25:43 - a financial criteria tour services but the reality is
25:46 - most folks that we serve do have
25:48 - food access this year years
25:50 - and for that
25:51 - on the rare occasion when we do serve someone
25:54 - who has the means who have financial means
25:57 - i can assure you they're usually on our services for less than a month
26:01 - right and they appreciate they receive the education
26:04 - but then they have the tools to do it themselves aid or or
26:08 - they have a month one or so one
26:10 - the folks that were serving they will not
26:13 - have access to services without mana or
26:16 - mana
26:16 - like agency right so this is not
26:19 - you know
26:20 - it's a fault or something that comes out that
26:21 - people are like oh we can't you know we can't
26:23 - feed everybody well
26:25 - i would argue that
26:26 - they
26:26 - need to be exploited but
26:28 - this is not
26:28 - what we're talking about
26:29 - this is a
26:30 - complex medical need
26:32 - so we have less than two minutes left we've already
26:35 - talked about represents cause they're asking
26:37 - and the hillock and obviously
26:38 - you need more legislative support in order to get this bill across the
26:42 - finish line so what have you been doing to engage
26:46 - lawmakers to pay attention and support this bill.
26:49 - Yeah so
26:49 - food just like the reach out i know as a
26:52 - i believe as of last Friday we had twenty.
26:54 - Folks on and on to the bill
26:56 - so outraged you know.
26:58 - Continuing our trips to
27:00 - Harrisburg making phone calls sending emails and
27:03 - like i said this is the bipartisan i think we
27:05 - got bipartisan support and
27:07 - i
27:08 - think
27:08 - most people and i think the phone
27:10 - up in Harrisburg are really really interested in being leaders in this space and
27:14 - you'll demonstrate you know again better health outcomes a significant health care
27:18 - reduction in health care costs
27:20 - last question sue any clue as to how soon lawmakers will take this up.
27:25 - I do not i wish i hadn't
27:28 - but i do know that in the budget
27:30 - budget hearings and so forth if
27:32 - this has come up in the topic.
27:34 - We have been talking with sue daugherty
27:36 - chief executive officer
27:38 - of men
27:39 - thank you very much for your time.
27:41 - Thank you so much it's been great talking with you.
27:58 - Hmm.