Posts Tagged ‘Preston Maring’

Celebrated farmer urges Kaiser Permanente doctors to further healthy food traditions

posted on April 5, 2011

By Grace Emery

Heritage correspondent*

Joel Salatin, celebrity farmer. Photo by Rachel Salatin.

When I heard that famed farmer Joel Salatin had come to Oakland to speak with Kaiser Permanente (KP) doctors, I felt like this event almost constituted a brush with celebrity. I wrote my senior thesis on food movements in the Bay Area, and my longtime interest in food politics had introduced me to Salatin and his work to bring sustainable food to America’s tables.** While some may be puzzled at the idea of a “famous farmer,” I leapt at the chance to write about a veritable hero of the food politics world, and I was anxious to learn more about where KP doctors and Salatin crossed paths.

Thanks in part to Michael Pollan’s discussion of Salatin in “The Omnivore’s Dilemma” and his appearance in the 2008 popular documentary “Food Inc.,” Salatin has become a renowned advocate of sustainable food and farming, and somewhat of an icon in the healthy food movement.

During his visit, Salatin, who raises beef, pork, and poultry at his Virginia family farm, Polyface Inc., spoke of the challenges small farmers face at the intersection of healthy food and politics. Locally grown food is often healthier and more sustainable, but small farmers struggle when selling their products to large institutions, preventing the large-scale adoption of a local food system.

Salatin started his visit with a stop at the birthplace of local food sales—the farmers market. Preston Maring, MD, a KP physician in Oakland, Calif., founded the first Kaiser Permanente farmers market at the Oakland Medical Center in 2003, and today there are more than 35 KP farmers markets in several regions, demonstrating Kaiser Permanente’s commitment to total health through nutrition.

After a visit to the market, Salatin spoke to a group of KP physicians on the topic of “Local Food to the Rescue.” His message served to both validate the work Kaiser Permanente farmers markets and hospital cafeterias are already doing, and to inspire Kaiser Permanente officials to supply hospitals with even more locally sourced food.

History of healthy eating

Kaiser urged wartime shipyard workers to eat healthy, even grow their own vegetables, as this 2009 poster illustrates. Design by Pam Zachary, KP Multimedia Department.

Kaiser Permanente has long focused on the link between healthy eating and prevention. Before Kaiser Permanente was synonymous with health care, war workers flocked from all parts of the U.S. to Richmond and Oakland, Calif., where they helped to build ships in the Kaiser Shipyards during WWII. Henry Kaiser quickly realized that to build ships at a fast pace his workers had to be healthy and strong, and that meant they needed to eat nutritious foods. He saw that well-nourished workers translated into less absenteeism, more productivity, and happier employees.

In a 1943 memo written by Cecil Cutting, MD, a founding Permanente physician, there is a clear emphasis on the importance of nutrition. With healthier meals, Cutting hoped to “bring about greater vitality, greater psychological effect and consequently increased productivity.”

In “Ships for Victory, author and historian Frederic Lane discusses the Maritime Commission’s initiative to improve in-plant feeding at America’s shipyards in 1943. Many shipyards received additional funds to provide more hot meals and make sure workers had access to healthy food in the workplace. In the Kaiser Shipyards on the West Coast the emphasis on good nutrition even spilled over into the Kaiser-run child care centers where children were fed three square meals, and mothers could pick up prepared meals when they collected their children at the end of the work day.

After the war when Kaiser established a health plan open to the public, nutrition and prevention were among the core principles. “Kaiser health planners supported concepts of holistic preventive care,” writes Rickey Hendricks in “A Model of National Health Care: The History of Kaiser Permanente.”

A focus on healthy food comes to Kaiser Permanente hospitals

Nutrition education was big in the WWII Kaiser shipyards, as highlighted in this poster created in 2009. Design by Pam Zachary, KP Multimedia Department.

A 1972 article from the publication “Institutions/Volume Feeding” highlights Kaiser Permanente hospitals’ progressive commitment to providing patient meals with higher nutrition at a lower cost.  Hospital dieticians were consulted so that every meal had optimal nutrition and calorie content for a patient’s needs. Kaiser Permanente even began to serve meals with an accompanying pamphlet that explained the nutrition information of the meal so that patients could “begin to learn more about the foods that they eat” while in the hospital.

Quality nutrition was at the center of meal planning, and administration felt that when it came to cost “it was of the utmost importance to separate patient feeding from other food-service activities necessary in a hospital.” While the development of an efficient system came about slowly, Kaiser Permanente never strayed from a focus on the healing power of healthy meals.

Oakland: an epicenter of progressive food movements

In my thesis research on the bay area, I was surprised to find that the city of Oakland has also long been a center of progressive food movements. In the 1970s, the Black Panther Party provided a free breakfast program and other “people’s community survival programs” in Oakland, serving residents hot meals with a side of political activism.

The effort of the Black Panther Party members to address hunger in their community was seen as revolutionary and empowering. Soup kitchens and free breakfast programs drew attention to the fact that the local food system was not currently meeting the needs of the West Oakland community. In “A Panther is a Black Cat,” (1971) author Reginald Majors explains that rather than wait on city officials, residents intended to subvert the power dynamic of the community by taking matters in to their own hands.

The free breakfast program for school children went hand in hand with revolutionary ideals and food became an expression of political power. Majors explains, “The Panthers would be betraying their own beliefs by not pushing a little political orientation along with the grits, bacon, and eggs” they dispensed each morning.

Today there are several West Oakland farmers markets in action that echo these themes of racial empowerment. My thesis focused on several of these markets, like “Mo Better Foods” and “Phat Beets Produce,” which provide both locally grown food and social empowerment within a community many residents believe to be historically disenfranchised.

Kaiser Permanente’s continued progress and inspiration

Given Kaiser Permanente’s nutritional history coupled with Oakland’s revolutionary food movement past, Joel Salatin could not have delivered his somewhat radical message to a better group in a better location. Kaiser Permanente initially focused on healthy food in hospitals, and then on bringing local, sustainable food to the community through the Kaiser Permanente farmers markets in Oakland.

What follows logically is a bridging of those two ideals: bring even more local and sustainable food in to hospital meals. Kaiser Permanente hospitals already bring in over 600 pounds per week of sustainably grown vegetables on patient entrée plates at 21 Northern California Kaiser Permanente Hospitals, and Salatin hopes his talk will encourage them to expand that trend and do even more. When he visited Oakland in January, Salatin said:

“The idea of bringing local food right into the façade of a hospital — there couldn’t be a better match. . . If anyone should lead the way in bringing this nutrient-dense food, food that heals people, heals the soil, heals communities, it should be the hospital. Every sphere of its existence should be healing.”

*Grace Emery is an intern with Kaiser Permanente Heritage Resources. She is a graduate of Whitman College in Walla Walla, WA, and is pursuing a career in public health.

**Grace Emery, “‘Feeding Ourselves’: Power and Participation in West Oakland Food Movements.” Senior Political Science thesis for Whitman College. Winner of the 2010 Whitman College Robert Fluno Award for Best Politics Thesis.

For more about Joel Salatin’s visit to Oakland Kaiser Permanente, http://xnet.kp.org/newscenter/aboutkp/green/stories/2011/021511joelsalatin.html

To learn more about Kaiser Permanente’s green programs:

http://xnet.kp.org/newscenter/aboutkp/green/factsheets/healthyfood.html

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Kaiser Permanente Farmers’ Market Guru Wins Home Front Award

posted on September 23, 2009

Preston Maring, MD

Preston Maring, MD

By Ginny McPartland

Preston Maring, MD, the Oakland Kaiser Permanente physician who has nurtured our farmers’ markets nationwide, is being honored by the National Park Service (NPS) with the 2009 World War II Home Front award.

The award will be presented to Maring during Richmond’s annual Home Front Festival 2:25 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 3, in the Craneway Pavilion on the Richmond waterfront. Admission to the festival is free. The theme of this year’s all day event is “We Grow When We Come Together,” highlighting victory and community gardens.

Dr. Maring is receiving the award for his role in “keeping the legacy of World War II victory gardens alive by establishing farmers’ markets at Kaiser Permanente and by promoting the role of fresh produce in preventive medicine,” said Carla Koop of the NPS.

Last year’s recipient of the Home Front award was Faith Petric, renowned folk singer and Home Front New Jersey shipyard worker who has championed union, civil rights and anti-nuclear movements since the 1930s.

Dr. Maring started the Friday Fresh farmers’ market at the Oakland Medical Center in 2003. Since then, he has helped to grow 35 more local produce markets at Kaiser Permanente facilities across America. Kaiser Permanente has also supported other farmers’ markets in communities near our medical centers and clinics.

Dr. Maring, an OB-GYN physician with 38 years experience, authored the introduction to EatingWell in Season, the Farmers’ Market Cookbook, published in 2009 by EatingWell magazine. He has been acclaimed nationally, interviewed by many writers and appeared on “Good Morning America Health” in April.

Here are some examples of his yummy, accessible recipes: Moroccan Tomato Soup, the Quarterpounder Revisited, healthy Mash Potatoes, Radicchio with Chicken, Pine Nuts, Raisins, and Orange/Balsamic Vinaigrette salad, and Strawberry, Yogurt and Granola Parfait. For more recipes, go to: recipe.kaiser-permanente.org

Preventing Disease through Healthy Eating

Kaiser Permanente first took on the role of encouraging healthy eating as preventive medicine in the Kaiser Shipyards during the war. Dr. Sidney R. Garfield, founder of the medical care program, and his fellow physicians urged shipyards workers to grow their own fresh fruits and vegetables in the face of shortages.

The shipyard newsletters often carried articles instructing workers to eat a balanced diet, including vitamin-rich produce, to stave off illness and build the stamina to work at a pace and intensity to meet seemingly impossible goals and deadlines.

Kaiser Permanente is a sponsor of the Home Front Festival and will have an exhibit in the Craneway Pavilion at the Oct. 3 event. The display will chronicle the birth of Kaiser Permanente’s preventive care program in the West Coast Shipyards.

Garfield Biographer to Speak at Festival

Also, Heritage Resources Director Tom Debley will speak during the festival on the Red Oak Victory ship docked at historic Shipyard No. 3, which is part of the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historical Park. Debley will discuss the life and achievements of Sidney R. Garfield, MD, who launched the nation’s largest Home Front medical care program at the Kaiser Shipyards.

Debley is the author of Dr. Sidney R. Garfield: The Visionary Who Turned Sick Care into Health Care, published this year. His talk will begin at noon. Free shuttles will be available to take festival participants from the pavilion at the end of Harbour Way South to the Red Oak Victory, located west of the Craneway in the historic Shipyard No. 3 (Port of Richmond).

For more information about the Home Front festival: homefrontfestival.com

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