Title: Food Insecurity and Overweight in WIC Clients
1Food Insecurity and Overweight in WIC Clients
- A Community Nutrition Project by
- University of Washington Students
- Winter 2005
2Food insecurity
- Food insecurity (FI) Occurs whenever the
availability of nutritionally adequate and safe
foods, or the ability to acquire acceptable foods
in socially acceptable ways, is limited in
socially acceptable ways is limited or
uncertain.1 - Prevalence of FI
- US 11.02
- WIC clients 53.71
- FI in King county -- BRFSS survey results1
- Percent of adults concerned about having enough
food for themselves or their families in the past
30 days - Seattle 5.5 North 4.7 East 2.7 South
4.6
3The FI-obesity link
- People in poor to low income households are more
likely to be obese than people in higher income
households - The association of food insecurity and obesity is
more prevalent in women than in men, and more
prevalent in African-American and Hispanic
populations than in other ethnic groups3,4,5,6,7
4Socioeconomic and Environmental Factors
- People with FI have limited food choices due to
their financial constraints - Cheaper foods are often energy dense and higher
in refined sugar and fat8 - Higher density of fast food outlets in low income
communities9
5Psychophysiological factors
- People with FI have elevated levels of stress
- Chronic stress can result in a series of
physiological events that lead to impaired energy
balance regulation increased food intake and
reduced energy expenditure10 - Periods of hunger or fear of hunger lead to
overeating when food is available, which can lead
to an increased total energy intake11 - Food acquisition cycle in low-income households
42 of food stamp households conduct grocery
shopping 1 time per month12
6(No Transcript)
7Conducting focus groups inWIC clinics
- Focus groups a common qualitative research tool
used to generate data from a small group of a
selected population.13 - 6 focus groups at 3 WIC sites
- Participation 2-8 participants per group, total
30 females - Locations Eastgate , Kent Alder Square, and
Renton - Date February 18, 2005
- Eligibility WIC clients at least 18 years old
English speaking
8Conducting Focus Groups inWIC Clinics (cont.)
- Recruitment UW students introduced the study and
gave flyers to potential participants at each
site for two weeks before the focus groups
session - Incentive 25 gift certificate for participation
in the discussion - Data analysistranscriptions were analyzed and
coded based on common themes -- four
overarching themes were identified
9Overview of focus groups questions
- Goal to obtain clients' perspective
suggestions about the link between FI and
overweight - The questions are divided into two parts
- Food insecurity
- Healthy weight
10Sample focus group questions
- How do you think a childs health is affected by
not having enough food? - What do you think are some reasons why some
families have trouble having enough food to feed
their families? - If you knew someone (a friend) who was worried
about running out of food, what are some things
you would tell her to do? - If you were in the situation of running out of
food and not having enough money for food for you
and your children, what could WIC do that would
be most helpful? - People who dont have money to buy enough food,
compared to those that do, are more likely to be
overweight. What do you think could be the cause
of this? - If a woman on WIC wanted help with her weight
after having a baby, what could WIC offer or
provide that would be most helpful to her? - This is only a partial list of all the
questions asked.
11Main findings14
- Participants indicated that they know the
differences between healthy and unhealthy foods
it is other factors that are leading to becoming
overweight - Lack of time and financial resources
- Stress and fear of hunger
- Poor quality of food in emergency food programs
- Lack of exercise resources
12Lack of financial and time resources
- Participants identify cheaper foods as bad
foods and healthy foods as expensive foods - Bad foods are also more convenient and easy to
prepare - Sometimes when people dont have enough money to
buy food, then that makes them prone to go get
whatever is cheaper... - People are so pressed for time, they have to fit
so many things into the day, you have all these
dollar menus and everything and you dont want to
get out of the car so you are looking for things
that are only drive-thru.
13Stress and fear of hunger
- Participants identified a relationship between
stress, hunger, and overweight - A fear of future hunger can lead to overbuying
and overeating food now - Food hording oh yes!!! Because when you dont
think youre going to have enough you buy too
much, and you will end up eating it. - Sometimes you just eat because youre stressed
out, so you get ice cream...you keep eating and
eating cause you dont have enough food, you
dont have any food so you just want to eat.
That makes you feel better.
14Poor quality of food in emergency food programs
- Participants look to emergency food assistance
programs to get enough food to feed their
families, in cases where the WIC amount wasnt
enough - They often perceive food from these sources to be
junk food, the consumption of which leads to
becoming overweight - When you run out of food and go down to the
food banks they load you up with donuts and bread
and its hard to balance your diet that way.
15Lack of exercise resources
- Participants recognize exercise as being part of
a way to address the problem of overweight - They would like more information and resources
for themselves and for their children, and some
would like a health professional to give the
information - I didn't know that there were certain things I
could do with him when he was 3 months old, like
swimming or whatever or like that, that could
have stopped him from being in the 97th
percentile.
16WIC focus group findings compared to the existing
literature
- New relationships identified
- Use of emergency food programs in addition to
using WIC, may contribute to overweight because
of the poor food quality in some of these
programs - Lack of resources can prevent people from
exercising, although participants recognize that
exercise is an effective way to prevent
overweight - In addition to a lack of financial resources,
leading to the purchase of cheaper, bad foods,
people lack the time to prepare healthier meals
and find it more efficient to purchase these
foods
17Recommendations
- Increasing access to and education about
nutrition and physical activity addresses the
concerns raised by the focus group participants - Increasing access to and expanding existing
services will also address the main problems
identified in the focus groups
18Recommendations for Access
- Increase flexibility of WIC benefits
- Selection should incorporate alternatives for
food allergies and cultural preferences - Consider increasing the number of stores clients
are able to purchase food from - Implement EBT system for clients to be able to
use WIC benefits more flexibly - Establish a network of organizations that offer
nutrition and physical activity programs and
activities, so that referrals can be made for
sites that are most appropriate and convenient
for each mother and child
19Recommendations for Education
- Nutrition
- Offer suggestions for increasing food variety and
give recipes to make quick, healthy meals - Hold workshops and create booklets about meal
planning and budgeting - Physical Activity
- Provide information about exercise for mothers
and age-appropriate information about exercise
for children - Offer post-partum workout videos
20Suggested interventions for WIC
- Continue advocating for use of EBT cards to
purchase WIC food items to make food acquisition
more flexible for clients - Improve nutrition education by providing
practical cooking demonstrations about how to
cook culturally appropriate recipes on a budget - Increase the availability of physical activity
groups that parents and children can do together - Provide information on low-cost physical
activity resources available in the community
21References
- DiGiorgio, L. Oberg, D. WIC Food Insecurity
UW Community Nutrition 531. Powerpoint
Presentation. January 7, 2005. - ERS. Household Food Security in the United
States, 2003. www.ers.usda.gov/publications/fanrr4
2/ - Olson CM. Nutrition and health outcomes
associated with food insecurity and hunger. J
Nutr. 1999129(2S Suppl)521S-524S. - Adams EJ, Grummer-Strawn L, Chavez G. Food
Insecurity is Associated with Increased Risk of
Obesity in California Women. J Nutr.
20031331070-1074. - Kaiser LL, Townsend MS, Melgar-Quinonez HR, Fujii
ML, Crawford PB. Choice of instrument influences
relations between food insecurity and obesity in
Latino women. Am J Clin Nutr. 2004801372-1378. - Alaimo K, Olson CM, Frongillo EA Jr. Low Family
Income and Food Insufficiency in Relation to
Overweight in US Children Is there a paradox?
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 20011551161-1167. - DOH. The Health of Washington State-Nutrition.
www.doh.wa.gov/HWS/doc/RPF/RPF_Nut.doc - Drewnowski A, Specter SE. Poverty and obesity
the role of energy density and energy costs. Am J
Clin Nutr. 2004796-16. - Reidpath DD, Burns C, Garrard J, Mahoney M,
Townsend M. An ecological study of the
relationship between social and environmental
determinants of obesity. Health Place.
20028141-5. - Bjorntorp P. Do stress reactions cause abdominal
obesity and comorbidities? Obes Rev.
2001273-86. - Frogillo AE, Olson MC, Rauschenbach SB, Kendall
A. Nutritional consequences of food insecurity in
a rural New York State county. University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Institute for Research on
Poverty. Discussion paper. 19971120-1197. - Parke E Wilde, Christine K Ranney. The monetary
food stamp cycle Shopping frequency and food
intake decisions in an endogenous switching
regression framework. Am J Agric Econ.
200082200-213. - Krueger, RA. Moderating Focus Groups. from Focus
Group Kit. Sage Publications. 1998. - Nutrition 531 Community Nutrition. University of
Washington. Analysis Summary WIC Focus Groups.
2005.
22Thank you!