SANTA BARBARA, Calif., April 28, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Kate Farms, a plant-based, clinically proven nutritional formula company, announced today that it is collaborating with Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health to distribute donated plant-based meal replacement shakes to Native American communities throughout the Navajo Nation, including elders in Tuba City, Chinle, Crown Point, Shiprock, and Fort Defiance. The donation includes 2,352 meals that will be distributed through the Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health.
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Native Americans were already suffering higher rates of infectious disease and mortality than any other population in the United States. Many Native Americans live in crowded, multi-generational homes, so effective home isolation is challenging. In addition, up to 40 percent of the families in some rural tribal communities already experienced food and water insecurity.
As these communities grapple with COVID-19, the Center is delivering food, water, and other critical supplies to families through its community health worker model and in partnership with tribal leaders. The pandemic has also increased the need for quality nutrition and plant-based foods can deliver critical calories and vitamins while also providing healthy nutrition. As part of its COVID-19 relief packages, the Center is including Kate Farms organic, plant-based meal replacement shakes to deliver key nutrients to elders at most risk.
"We commend organizations like the Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health for proactively serving Native American elders and their families," said John Hommeyer, chief experience officer, Kate Farms. "We are donating our formulas to partners who can deliver nourishment directly, quickly, and to the most at-risk. We hope other companies like ours step up likewise to support Native Americans in underserved and frequently ignored communities."
Kate Farms is donating $1 million of its meal replacement shakes to organizations such as the Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health that are able to quickly and directly serve people who are at the highest levels of risk in the pandemic.
Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health
Founded in 1991 and based in the Department of International Health of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health supports public health interventions designed for and by Native peoples. The Center has offices in tribal communities across Arizona and New Mexico as well as a Great Lakes Hub serving tribes in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and along the shared border with Canada. The Center also supports public health interventions in more than 140 tribal communities in over 21 states. These partnerships have achieved landmark public health breakthroughs credited with saving millions of children's lives in the U.S. and worldwide. To learn more about the Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health, visit: http://caih.jhu.edu.
About Kate Farms
Kate Farms was founded in 2012 by parents determined to save their daughter's life after a diagnosis of failure to thrive and is the #1 recommended plant-based formula. Kate Farms offers medical formulas for children and adults, to be used as sole source or supplemental nutrition, for oral or tube feeding. They are available nationally and eligible for insurance coverage with Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance. Kate Farms formulas are made for tolerance with easily digested organic pea protein, fiber, and phytonutrients, and without common allergens or artificial sweeteners or flavors. Kate Farms can be accessed in more than 600 US hospitals, including the top children's hospitals; availability is increasing daily. Visit www.katefarms.com.
For more information, visit www.katefarms.com or follow the company on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, or LinkedIn.
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