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DC’s Bread for the City aims to lift people with chronic conditions up with ‘a prescription for cash’

Helena Smith, right, of Washington, chooses fresh food items while being helped by Bread for the City volunteer, Pixie Alexander, of Washington, Wednesday, May 10, 2023, at the food pantry in Washington. The formal end of the national Public Health Emergency on Thursday marks the end of several U.S. pandemic-era emergency support program, from extra food assistance to automatic enrollment in Medicaid. "I like this a lot because they give us a variety of fruit," says Smith, "instead of just cans." (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)(AP/Jacquelyn Martin)

D.C. nonprofit is offering extra financial support to people in need who are suffering from a chronic condition.

The program is called “Cash RX” and its goal, according to the organization, is to address economic inequality and health disparities in the District.

鈥淚t’s literally a prescription for cash,鈥 said Brittany Pope, the economic security supervisor in the social services department at Bread for the City.

The program is helping five D.C. residents suffering from chronic conditions, such as high blood pressure, uncontrolled diabetes, depression and anxiety.

鈥淔ood insecurity, housing insecurity, community safety, being able to have access to reliable transportation 鈥 all of the things that contribute to our well-being,鈥 Pope said of what residents can do with the funds the organization gives out.

Pope said the participants are the ones who determine how much money they receive from the program and decide on how they want to spend the funds. Among the first participants, organizers found the average monthly ask was between $1,100 and $1,400 a month.

鈥淲e wanted to do something innovative, something new, and show that if the participants have the keys and they are involved in selecting their cash amount, it’ll sort of contradict these narratives that the participants won’t spend the money in ways that will benefit their lives,鈥 Pope said.

The program is only being announced now, but it officially kicked off late last year and has been successful, according to the organization.

The recipients are also required to check in quarterly. Results show that those recipients are using the money they’ve received in positive ways, according to Daisy Gomez Palacios, a member of the economic security team.

鈥淭hey’re less stressed about being able to afford utilities, rent, food,鈥 Gomez Palacios said.

It has also decreased a sense of food and housing insecurity, according to Gomez Palacios.

In one case, Gomez Palacios said a participant used the money to pay for a pair of 鈥渕ore fashionable鈥 glasses for her middle school aged daughter that were not covered by their insurance.

鈥淵es, it’s just a pair of glasses, but to a child and to a mother who can provide that for the child, it means a lot more,鈥 Gomez Palacios said.

In another instance, a diabetic woman is using the money to pay for a pescatarian diet, which helps her to treat her condition.

With a third participant, not having a limitation on how to spend the money allows them to buy culturally important foods that remind them of the country in which they grew up.

鈥淏ecause of Cash RX, she鈥檚 able to buy that food with more frequency and it helps her with her homesickness,鈥 Gomez Palacios.

While some might express concerns that a participant might spend the money on harmful items, such as alcohol or drugs, that wasn’t a concern for the organization and they said this project shows that doesn’t happen.

“‘What if people spend money on things that are nefarious? What if people are spending money on alcohol [or] unnecessary things?’ What we’re seeing is that it’s not true,鈥 Gomez Palacios said.

The program is funded in part from a health fund made with the proceeds of a settlement between D.C. and insurer Care First. Other donations that help fund the program come from both the Diane & Norman Bernstein Foundation and the Hartfield Foundation.

Pope said the early results show this program is working and that they plan to select five more participants.

鈥淭his is a holistic project. We’re lifting up not only things that support their physical and mental health, but their spiritual health and their well-being as a whole,鈥 said Pope.

Her hope is that this program not only expands down the road, but also serves as an example to others.

鈥淲e’re hoping that when the program reaches the end of this phase, and that we’re able to report our outcomes, that it’ll be a model that will change systems,鈥 said Pope.

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Mike Murillo

Mike Murillo is a reporter and anchor at WTOP. Before joining WTOP in 2013, he worked in radio in Orlando, New York City and Philadelphia.

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