Insights from the EAT–Lancet Commission Report and What They Mean for Our Work
The latest findings from the EAT-Lancet Commission Report on Food Systems reinforce something Project FoodBox sees every day: nutrition is one of the most powerful tools available to improve health, strengthen communities, and reduce the cost of chronic disease.
While the report provides a global diagnosis, its conclusions align directly with the work being done locally through our medically tailored nutrition programs. Below is a clear look at how the science aligns with the mission and impact of Project FoodBox.
The EAT–Lancet Commission highlights that the most beneficial diets emphasize:
Project FoodBox’s nutrition plans fully reflect this guidance. Our dietitians design medically tailored produce boxes that support diverse clinical needs:
These patterns directly mirror the recommendations of the “Planetary Health Diet,” grounding our program in globally validated nutrition science.
The report makes one point unmistakably clear: poor diet quality is now among the leading contributors to preventable disease worldwide. Project FoodBox provides a practical, clinically aligned response:
Food-as-Medicine programs like ours have been linked to dramatic reductions in chronic disease risk, including:
This is prevention where it matters most—in the home, at the dinner table, and within communities facing the highest barriers to care.
The EAT–Lancet report warns that global food systems have already exceeded six of nine planetary boundaries—driving climate change, water depletion, biodiversity loss, and nutrient pollution. Reducing food waste and strengthening regional food networks are two of the report’s top recommendations. Project FoodBox is already acting on these principles:
With roughly 40% of U.S. food going uneaten, this model not only nourishes families—it protects natural resources and reinforces local agriculture.
According to the EAT–Lancet findings, only 1% of the world’s population lives in countries that meet both health and environmental standards for diet. Meanwhile, millions struggle with affordability and access. This reality mirrors what many Project FoodBox communities face today:
Project FoodBox helps close this gap by delivering:
Equity is not an outcome—it’s a design principle of our entire model.
The EAT–Lancet Commission argues that dietary change, waste reduction, climate resilience, and health equity must be addressed together—not in isolation. This integrated approach is already built into the Project FoodBox model.
This is what it looks like when global scientific consensus translates into local, measurable action.
The EAT–Lancet Commission outlines a vision for healthier, more sustainable, and more equitable food systems. Project FoodBox turns that vision into reality across communities from California to New York, one medically tailored box at a time.
By connecting families with fresh produce, supporting local farmers, reducing waste, and partnering with healthcare providers, we are building a model of nutrition-powered healthcare that improves lives today and strengthens systems for tomorrow.