Teaching Kids to Cook Is a Public Health Strategy Philadelphia Can’t Afford to Lose
Posted by The Philadelphia Citizen on April 7, 2026
Philadelphia’s food culture is certainly something to celebrate. But behind the city’s acclaimed restaurants and Michelin-starred chefs is a quieter reality: Many Philadelphians are struggling with nutrition-related disease.
Heart disease remains the leading cause of death in Philadelphia, and the city has the highest prevalence of diabetes among the nation’s 10 major cities. These conditions don’t develop overnight. They take shape over years, driven by a complex mix of factors, including access to healthy food, socio-economic barriers, chronic stress, and daily habits around how people shop, cook, and eat.
Which is exactly why prevention must start early.
March marked National Nutrition Month, an especially important time to recognize the barriers that make healthy eating challenging for too many. In Philadelphia, community organizations work year-round to build those habits early with the help from federally-funded programs like Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and SNAP-Ed, which supports evidence-based nutrition education for low-income communities.
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