Food access in Philadelphia
Several Penn Medicine locations provide access to healthy food for patients, families, and local communities. A few of our community food pantry and refrigerator projects are highlighted below.
HUP Harvest is a food pantry located at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania (HUP) and the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania-Cedar (HUP-Cedar). Its expanding array of services includes free food and consultation with patients and families experiencing food insecurity, such as postpartum patients and families in the Intensive Care Nursery. In partnership with Philabundance, the city’s largest hunger relief organization, HUP Harvest receives at least 500 pounds of food weekly and distributes up to 200 grocery bags each month, which are tailored to the specific dietary needs of recipients. HUP Harvest also provides recipes and resources to encourage healthy eating.
The FAST platform, developed by the Center for Health Equity Advancement (CHEA) at Penn Medicine, improves connections between healthcare systems, food access organizations, and minority-owned businesses to address food insecurity in Philadelphia. By streamlining the process of matching food needs with available resources, FAST ensures quicker and more reliable food delivery to vulnerable households. Since its launch in 2021, the program has formed important partnerships, including collaboration with Black and Mobile, a Black-owned delivery service, to meet urgent food delivery needs. The initiative aims to expand further, fostering stronger community networks to ensure no one goes without food.
Penn Medicine and the Philadelphia Union partnered to open a community refrigerator and pantry at the Boys and Girls Club of Chester, addressing food insecurity in the area. Stocked with fresh produce, pantry staples, and frozen meats, the community refrigerator is accessible weekdays with a no-questions-asked policy. The program is supported by non-profit Sharing Excess and community volunteers who ensure weekly restocking and community engagement through donation drives and volunteer events.
Penn Medicine and the Philadelphia Flyers teamed up to donate 30 pounds of food per assist in the 2023-24 season, totaling 11,070 pounds to Philabundance’s Food Desert Program. The program, which continues in the 2024-25 season, helps address food insecurity in Philadelphia, where about 10 percent of residents struggle to access nutritious meals.