Ben Chrisinger
@bchrisinger.bsky.social
1.9K followers 1.3K following 460 posts
Assistant Professor in Community Health at Tufts, formerly faculty @ DSPI Oxford. I study place and health, especially food and welfare. #SNAPmatters https://facultyprofiles.tufts.edu/benjamin-chrisinger
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#SNAP is already globally unusual as an antipoverty program. Cash-like, just for non-prepared foods, at approved retailers.

Evidence from cash transfer programs suggests there are easier ways to protect #foodsecurity.

🛟 🩺📊 🩺 #econsky #academicsky
Keeping SNAP in Line with Global Evidence on Food Security | NEJM
Proposals to introduce nutrition-based restrictions in SNAP ignore a global movement away from this kind of welfare program administration and toward systems that can more effectively improve health.
www.nejm.org
This is really interesting.

MAHA is a loose assemblage of positions/values. Helpful to see who’s self-identifying this way and which positions they most align with.

Maybe also some good news for pediatricians! Still a trusted source for vaccine info (and pretty high for both MAHA/non-MAHA) 🩺 🛟
Polling Insights on the MAHA Movement via @kff.org

56% of MAHA parents trust RFK Jr to provide reliable vaccines info (ugh)

81% of MAGA parents are MAHA

"MAHA-supporting parents echo vaccine skepticism"

Non-MAHA more likely to view guns, infectious disease, costs as big issues.
Reposted by Ben Chrisinger
“Administrative burden,” redefined
Totally agree the system needs a re-think!

More just an exasperated thought… it’s getting really, really hard to find peer reviewers, even for really interesting papers!
My fellow academics: let’s offer a stranger some kindness today by accepting a peer review invitation.

#academicsky
Policy-based evidence-making
“There is always an executive order” is the new “there is always a tweet.”
Feel free to never take anything these guys say about science seriously
=
The WHITE HOUSE
45 47
K PRESIDENTIAL ACTIONS
Restoring Gold Standard Science
Executive Orders
May 23, 2025
What continues to shock me is the total abdication of responsibility by social media companies in this.

The grift would not be so profitable, the fear would not be so great, the lies so hard to shake, were it not for a handful of powerful companies.

The scale of it all is stunning.
Reflecting on how sad it is that people will needlessly suffer from this new influencer/regulator/grifter health ecosystem.

Like, my family has lost friends to this: refusing Covid vaccines and cancer treatments based on bad advice about risks and cures.

And not “lost” socially. They died.

🛟 🩺
Sliver of hope here… some good folks who have been opposing these kinds of projects for years are noticing that the playbook is the same, and stepping up

Piedmont Environmental Council is a good one in VA www.pecva.org/region/culpe...
Existing and Proposed Data Centers – A Web Map – The Piedmont Environmental Council
www.pecva.org
It’s such an old playbook… corporations needing mines, power lines, waste facilities etc pitch $$$ solutions to local govts with dwindling resources (the easy way) OR threaten overwhelming via courts (the hard way).

A tough spot for local govt.
(For even better insights on the food security measure, follow Parke! 👇)
The federal government is canceling the leading national survey of household food insecurity and hunger in the United States, @wsj.com reported today. The Dec 2025 survey will be canceled, while the Oct 2025 report based on Dec 2024 data will be released as usual. (1/4)
WSJ headline: Trump Administration Cancels Annual Hunger Survey
As others have said, not collecting data about our problems does not make them disappear.

But it does make it more difficult to respond.
The construct isn’t perfect, but food insecurity is a measurable and systematic snapshot of hunger in America. It's an indicator for other health risks. And it's an macroeconomic warning sign.
Most students have seen the term somewhere, but few know what it really means.

So, we explore the survey instruments and their many adaptations.

We discuss how they capture different experiences: worrying about food, cutting back, and even going hungry.
Every time I teach "Beyond the Food Desert," we spend a whole week on food insecurity.

Why?

#academicsky 🥗 🛟
NPR @npr.org · 24d
The Department of Agriculture said it will end a longstanding annual food insecurity survey. Experts say the move will obscure the effects of recent changes that will lead to people losing food aid.
USDA cancels survey tracking how many Americans struggle to get enough food
The Department of Agriculture said it will end a longstanding annual food insecurity survey. Experts say the move will obscure the effects of recent changes that will lead to people losing food aid.
n.pr
Totally. The hidden hurdles of working with participants, unpacking the results, convincing peer reviewers, etc etc etc… it’s a decathlon not a race
Shareholders love a value 😔
As in the Food Is Medicine movement, I worry a bit about the DIY-ethos that “nutritionism” can bring… e.g., that everyone can cook themselves to good health.

Still, knowledge is power, and I appreciate the MDs in the piece who talk about building trust and understanding with patients.
Lots more time to watch ads tbh
"AI saves so much time so u can work more hours during the week"
Reposted by Ben Chrisinger
Just gonna go ahead and say, I find the SNAP score very surprising. We thought it would be about $10 billion smaller, not a little larger. And the work requirements part is unchanged when it MUST be smaller, and state share got higher EVEN in 2028 and 2029. Have reached out but find this surprising.
Reposted by Ben Chrisinger
SNAP cuts don’t just mean less food for families. They mean fewer sales for grocers, fewer dollars for farmers, and fewer dollars in local economies. #SNAPmatters
Reposted by Ben Chrisinger
The impacts of SNAP cuts are far-reaching. Read our analysis to learn about the ripple effects of these harmful cuts: projectbread.org/news/in-an-a...
Like if anyone wants to talk about the MBTA I’m sure folks would be quite interested.