Introduction
For decades, diet has been sidelined in clinical care. But Dr. Priya Nandini, a primary care physician and nutrition scientist, is changing that. Her Prescription Pantry program integrates medical-grade nutrition into daily treatment plans, using food not as support—but as medicine.
A Clinical Kitchen Revolution
“Every chronic condition we treat—diabetes, hypertension, IBS—has a dietary component,” Nandini explains. Her approach includes customized meal kits, grocery delivery partnerships, and nutritionist consults embedded in primary care visits.
Results You Can Taste
In her pilot program, 73% of patients with prediabetes reversed their condition in under six months. “Food is the most underutilized tool in medicine,” she says. “But now, we’re handing out recipes instead of just pills.”
A New Kind of Prescription Pad
The Prescription Pantry model is expanding to hospital systems and employer health plans. “This is about empowering patients,” Nandini adds. “Preventive care starts in the kitchen.”