New WSU Extension tool helps food banks improve access, nutrition, safety

Long shelves of packaged food in food bank.

Northwest food banks and pantries can improve food accessibility, safety and variety for their communities and clients with help from a recently published tool created by Washington State University Extension researchers.

An extension team led by WSU Professor Emeritus Karen Barale detailed development of the new Healthy Food Pantry Assessment Toolkit in the December 2018 issue of the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior.

The journal article details how the tool was created based on community partner experiences and food pantry feedback.

Publishing the tool last fall, Alexandra Bush‑Kaufman, research coordinator for Community & Public Health Nutrition with WSU Pierce County Extension, led field research with support from M. Catalina Aragón, a WSU Pierce County Extension associate in research, and Marie Walsh, a research assistant at Colorado State University.

The Healthy Food Pantry Assessment Toolkit helps managers measure the healthfulness of their food banks, seeing how their pantries rank for best practices, including accessibility for people of all abilities and schedules; access to farm‑fresh produce and nutritional information; variety of lean, low‑fat and low‑sodium foods; food safety training, nutrition classes and school programs; and other areas.

Find the toolkit on the WSU Pierce County Extension website.

 

Media Contact:

  • Alexandra Bush‑Kaufman, research coordinator, WSU Pierce County Extension, 253‑798‑3253, kaufman@wsu.edu

Next Story

Recent News

Students design outdoor story walk for Keller schools

A group of WSU landscape architecture students is gaining hands‑on experience by designing an outdoor classroom with members of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Indian Reservation.

E-tongue can detect white wine spoilage before humans can

While bearing little physical resemblance to its namesake, the strand-like sensory probes of the “e-tongue” still outperformed human senses when detecting contaminated wine in a recent WSU-led study.