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Latino IIealth Access Weekly Food Distribution Program <br />RFP 22-009A REVIVE Santa Ana: Food Supply/Distribution Programs <br />swiftly, addressing food insecurity that has been exacerbated during the pandemic will require <br />additional support systems, including ongoing access to food supply for these families while <br />simultaneously taking an approach to build systems change for the eradication of food insecurity <br />over the long-term. <br />4. Proposal shall include details of collaborations with local organizations <br />For its food distribution program, LHA collaborates with the following local entities: <br />• Second Harvest Food Bank and OC Food Bank —manage securing the food supply <br />and other resources that are distributed at LHA. They arrange pick-up times and LHA <br />staff manage the entirety of packaging, transportation, and distribution. <br />• Community Action Partnership of Orange Diaper Bank — LHA answered the call of <br />the Diaper Bank at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic to connect families in need to <br />diapers, at a time when they and other partners had to pause direct services. The <br />partnership has remained as there has been an ongoing need for diapers among the <br />families served in the weekly food distribution. LHA receives approximately 6,000 <br />diapers a month to distribute. <br />• Downtown Family Resource Center, Local Schools, and Churches — LHA has a <br />network of partners that refer families to the food and diaper distribution event each <br />week. Flyers are shared regularly along with other educational information on services <br />and partners disseminate with their constituency. This allows us to reach more families <br />throughout Santa Ana. ICey partners include Downtown Family Resource Center housed <br />at LHA, SAUSD FACE, and Scholarship Prep Academy. <br />5. Proposal shall include details of innovation in program/service delivery <br />Latino Health Access prograrnming combines evidence -based practices with community <br />expertise to best meet the needs of our community while strengthening community assets and <br />enhancing capacity. Over the last year, LHA has collaborated with public health researchers to <br />understand the impact of the pandemic. In an article published in the Harvard Journal of <br />Hispanic Policy', we find that our communities experienced the economic impact of the <br />pandemic first, especially immigrant communities who remained civically disconnected from <br />health and social systems due to structural exclusion. In a subsequent article published in <br />Preventing Chronic Disease, a CDC -sponsored journal'-, we analyze data from LHA's Emotional <br />Wellness program pre and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Results show that while mental <br />health/emotional wellness concerns do not disappear, there is a significant shift from our <br />community toward seeking referrals and resources related to social needs, including those that <br />will reduce increasing food insecurity. This research shows the interconnectedness of food <br />insecurity, other social determinants of health, and overall mental health/emotional wellness of <br />' Montiel, G. I., Moon, K. J., Cantero, P. J., Pantoja, L., Ortiz, H. M., Arpero, S., .& Nawaz, S. (2021). Queremos <br />Transformar Corranidades: Incorporating Civic Engagement as an Equity Strategy in Promotor-Led COVID-19 <br />Response Efforts in Latins Communities. Harvard Journal of Hispanic Policy, 33, 79-102. <br />'Moon, K. J, Montiel, G. I., Cantero, P. J., & Nawaz, S. (2021). Peer Reviewed: Addressing Emotional Wellness <br />During the COVID-19 Pandemic: the Role of Promotores in Delivering Integrated Mental Health Care and Social <br />Services. Preventing Chronic Disease, 18. <br />