Get free groceries and a checkup thanks to Feeding Tampa Bay, BayCare – Tampa Bay Times
Visitors seeking free groceries from Feeding Tampa Bay will soon have access to health care services and the option of being screened for diabetes and heart disease.
Thatâs courtesy of a new health education center that BayCare Health Systems will operate at the food bankâs Tampa warehouse at 4702 Transport Drive.
There, visitors can be screened for chronic illnesses, take CPR classes, and have an onsite nutritionist evaluate their diet. The center will also be staffed with nurse practitioners and patient navigators who can help uninsured visitors enroll in a range of health insurance plans available to them.
The center held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Friday and health services will start Tuesday. The facility will operate two to three days per week at first but will eventually expand its hours, said Feeding Tampa Bay President and CEO Thomas Mantz.
âFood drives people into the social service network more than any other need,â he said. âThen we said, âwhat else do they need?ââ
Related: Hillsborough pledges $5 million to Feeding Tampa BayFeeding Tampa Bay President and CEO Thomas Mantz addresses the crowd at Friday’s news conference at the food bank’s Tampa warehouse. The nonprofit partnered with BayCare Health Systems to open a health education center there.
Mantz said the center will open the door for some community members to take necessary first steps towards improving their health, from getting physician referrals to enrolling in a BayCare weight loss program. He hopes to expand services based on feedback from the community, and will eventually welcome the food bankâs volunteers to use it as well.
The facility will also have a Higi station, a device that allows people to check their weight, blood pressure and heart rate. They are also available in grocery stores and BayCare hospitals across Tampa Bay. Users can use the Higi app to record their biometrics when using the machine and spot consistently high or low numbers, said Keri Eisenbeis, BayCareâs president of government and community relations.
The hospital system said each machine costs $4,000 per year to operate.
The BayCare Higi station at the BayCare Health Education Center inside of Feeding Tampa Bay’s Tampa warehouse on Friday. The Higi station is a state-of-the-art device that enables community members to check their weight, blood pressure and heart rate.
BayCare and Feeding Tampa Bay made a joint investment of about $100,000 to fund the project, Mantz said, which covered the cost of building the center and running it for a year.
The hospital system and food relief agency deepened their partnership in 2019 to address the health impacts of food insecurity. Aside from the new center, the two entities also supported 18 public school food pantries in low-income neighborhoods through BayCareâs $450,000 investment, Eisenbeis said.
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BayCare identified addressing food insecurity as a priority in 2019 after completing the Community Health Needs Assessment, Eisenbeis said, which is done every three years with leaders and social service agencies in Hillsborough, Pinellas, Polk and Pasco counties to identify key issues that demand community attention.
Between 2019 and 2022, BayCare focused on food insecurity, barriers to access health care, and mental health and substance use. Eisenbeis said they are currently working to identify issues for the next three years.
Feeding Tampa Bay, an arm of Feeding America, distributes groceries and provides free meals at its full-service restaurant to low-income families. The organization also brings meals to after-school and summer school programs and helps eligible individuals apply for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
At the end of Friday’s ribbon cutting ceremony for the BayCare Health Education Center, those attending were encourage to sign their name on a chalk wall outside. Feeding Tampa Bay has partnered with BayCare Health Systems to open a health education center at the food bank’s Tampa warehouse. Visitors to the grocery store who have medical issues will be able to get personal health care consultation. The facility will also have a Higi station, a device that allows people to check their weight, blood pressure and heart rate. The initiative will help lower income families get medical treatment before ailments develop into serious and expensive medical problems.