Reviewed clinical summary · Source-linked · Educational use only

Do Food Vouchers Improve Diets in Diabetic Patients?

Clinical Bottom Line

An RCT finds a grocery voucher modestly increases fruit and cuts refined grains in food-insecure diabetic patients, but does not significantly change diet quality or HbA1c. PICO summary and commentary.

Summary: In a randomised trial in people with diabetes facing food or financial insecurity, a monthly grocery voucher modestly increased whole-fruit intake and reduced refined grains, but overall diet quality and HbA1c did not change significantly.

PICO Summary

ElementDetail
PopulationPatients with diabetes or prediabetes facing food or financial insecurity; sampled from a larger trial, 6-month follow-up, Canada.
InterventionMonthly grocery voucher for healthy foods, with diet assessed by the Canadian Diet History Questionnaire III.
ComparisonNo voucher (control).
OutcomeVoucher recipients ate more whole fruit (+0.8 daily servings; 95% CI 0.1–1.6) and fewer refined grains (-1.0; 95% CI -1.9 to -0.1). Overall diet-quality score (HEFI-2019) did not differ (52.4 vs 51.0; CI crossed null), and HbA1c change was not significant (-0.4; 95% CI -1.4 to 0.5).
RCT Nutrients · 2025

Grocery voucher and diet in diabetes

RCT · food-insecure diabetes · 6 months

Trial design
Food-insecure diabetes Enrolled & assessed RANDOMISED 1:1 Voucher Monthly grocery voucher Control No voucher Between-group diet and HbA1c differences vs control
Between-group effect (95% CI)
0 (no difference) -2 2 Whole fruit (servings/d)+0.8 ✓Refined grains (servings/d)-1 ✓HbA1c change (%)-0.4 Mean difference vs control · ✓ = significant
Whole fruit
+0.8 servings
95% CI 0.1 to 1.6
Refined grains
-1.0
95% CI -1.9 to -0.1
Diet quality (HEFI)
52.4 vs 51.0
NS, CI crossed null
HbA1c change
-0.4
95% CI -1.4 to 0.5, NS
⬡ Bottom Line

A monthly grocery voucher modestly raised whole-fruit intake and cut refined grains, but overall diet quality and HbA1c did not significantly change.

Expert Commentary

This is a worthwhile trial addressing something prescriptions cannot fix: the simple fact that healthy food costs money many of my patients do not have. The premise that a grocery voucher could improve diet in food-insecure people with diabetes is both humane and testable, and the results are honestly modest, more whole fruit and fewer refined grains, which are real if small dietary improvements. The candid part, which the summary rightly preserves, is that the broader markers did not move: overall diet quality was statistically unchanged and HbA1c did not significantly improve, with confidence intervals crossing null. That is unsurprising given the small sample drawn from a larger study and a six-month window, but it cautions against overselling vouchers as a glycaemic intervention. The likely truth is that money helps at the margins but that food insecurity sits within a web of barriers, knowledge, time, access, competing costs, that a voucher alone does not dissolve. Can I use this with my patients? Yes, as part of social-needs care. It supports advocating for food-access support in food-insecure diabetic patients as a reasonable, low-harm measure, while being honest that on current evidence it produces small dietary shifts rather than proven changes in control, and that larger trials are needed.

References

Buadu A, Ul Haq MZ, Sinha L, Sabir A, Gucciardi E, Persaud N. Assessing the effect of a food voucher on the dietary intake of patients with diabetes using the Canadian Diet History Questionnaire III: a randomized control trial. Nutrients. 2025;17(17):2865. doi:10.3390/nu17172865

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