09/02/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/02/2025 07:33
2 Min Read
Sep 02, 2025
By
Samiyah Para-Cremer Moore, M.Sc., Viktoria Sterkhova, M.P.H., Emma Uridge, M.P.H.,Ivan Williams, M.B.A.,
Avanthi Chatrathi, M.P.H., Stewart Cole, Wen-Chieh Lin, Ph.D.In more than half of Kansas counties, at least 4 in 10 households earn less than the ALICE Survival Budget, or the bare minimum cost of household essentials to live and work. In about a third of Kansas counties, 20 percent or more of children do not have enough food for an active, healthy lifestyle.
Hunger Free Kansas is an initiative launched in 2023 by the Kansas Health Foundation and a statewide coalition of partners to end hunger and food insecurity across the state. To foster creative conversations and solutions around hunger, health and nutrition access, Hunger Free Kansas is bringing their Data Walk to Kansas communities.
Data walks are effective and engaging ways to tell the story of hunger in Kansas by using data. During a Data Walk, participants in small groups walk around a room, view data posters, and discuss underlining issues and creative policy and system-focused solutions. Eight posters highlight key data in understanding hunger in Kansas.
Some of the Kansas data discussed included:
Funding and support for the Data Walk posters was provided by the Kansas Health Foundation. The Kansas Health Institute (KHI) provided the analysis and design of the Data Walk posters.
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Visit the Hunger Free Kansas website
The Kansas Health Institute supports effective policymaking through nonpartisan research, education and engagement. KHI believes evidence-based information, objective analysis and civil dialogue enable policy leaders to be champions for a healthier Kansas. Established in 1995 with a multiyear grant from the Kansas Health Foundation, KHI is a nonprofit, nonpartisan educational organization based in Topeka.
Learn More About KHI