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1.
Matern Child Health J ; 24(Suppl 2): 76-83, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32385692

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The Pregnancy Assistance Fund (PAF) program funds states and tribes to provide a wide range of services to improve health, social, educational, and economic outcomes for expectant and parenting teens and young adults, their children, and their families. This introductory article to the Maternal and Child Health Journal supplement Supporting Expectant and Parenting Teens: The Pregnancy Assistance Fund provides a description of the PAF program, including the program goals and structure, participants and communities served, and services provided; presents data on the reach and success of the program; and describes lessons learned from PAF grantees on how to enhance programs and services to have the best outcomes for expectant and parenting young families. METHODS: Performance measure data are used to describe the reach and success of the PAF program, and implementation experiences and lessons learned from PAF grantees were gathered through a standardized review of grantee applications and from interviews with grant administrators. RESULTS: Since its establishment in 2010, the PAF program has served 109,661 expectant and parenting teens, young adults, and their families across 32 states, including the District of Columbia, and seven tribal organizations; established more than 3400 partnerships; and trained more than 7500 professionals. Expectant and parenting teens and young adults who participated in the PAF program stay in high school, make plans to attend college, and have low rates of repeat pregnancy within a year. CONCLUSIONS: Expectant and parenting teens and young adults in the PAF program demonstrated success in meeting their educational goals and preventing repeat unintended pregnancies. In addition, the staff who implemented the PAF programs learned many lessons for how to enhance programs and services to have the best outcomes for expectant and parenting young families, including creating partnerships to meet the multifaceted needs of teen parents and using evidence-based programs to promote program sustainability.


Subject(s)
Needs Assessment/standards , Parenting/trends , Pregnancy in Adolescence/psychology , Public Assistance/standards , Adolescent , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Public Assistance/trends , Social Support , Young Adult
2.
Biodemography Soc Biol ; 65(1): 16-30, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32065538

ABSTRACT

This paper discusses the effects of social assistance on kinship relationships in Roma, a disadvantaged European minority population, and how variation in kin support affects self-reported health and reproductive success. Data were collected in 2016-7 in several rural Roma settlements in central Serbia. The sample consisted of 143 men and 221 women. Demographic information (e.g., age, gender, educational level, marital and reproductive history, level of socioeconomic status and residence pattern), social assistance history, health status, height, and weight were collected, in addition to kinship relationship dynamics. Receiving social assistance was consistently negatively associated with all measures of kin support, more so for Roma males than females while decreased kin support was found to result in poorer self-rated health and decline in reproductive success.


Subject(s)
Family/psychology , Public Assistance/standards , Roma/psychology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Public Assistance/statistics & numerical data , Roma/statistics & numerical data , Rural Population , Serbia , Socioeconomic Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires
3.
Eval Program Plann ; 72: 33-39, 2019 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30261348

ABSTRACT

This article describes the experience and process of using community mapping as a tool for collecting data on the functioning of housing-related support services in Metro Vancouver. We outline our mapping methods and discuss strengths and challenges encountered during workshops aimed at understandings how the system of housing-related supports function. Strengths were that workshops provided a forum for social participation and engagement. In addition, mapping is a research tool that enables local knowledge of service functioning and service gaps to be accessed and exchanged. Challenges include ensuring diverse representation; reducing power imbalances; and having adequate space to accommodate interested participants.


Subject(s)
Data Collection/methods , Housing/organization & administration , Program Evaluation/methods , Public Assistance/organization & administration , Canada , Community-Based Participatory Research , Community-Institutional Relations , Group Processes , Humans , Public Assistance/standards , Qualitative Research
4.
Index enferm ; 26(3): 215-219, jul.-sept. 2017.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-168622

ABSTRACT

El presente trabajo pretende poner de relieve algunos de los obstáculos que han tenido que sortear las políticas públicas que enmarcan la atención a las personas en situación de dependencia desde 2004 hasta nuestros días. Para ello, se lleva a cabo en primer lugar un acercamiento terminológico que pretende evitar el denominado estiramiento conceptual, para después, afrontar algunas de las dificultades presentes en la propia génesis de la Ley 39/2006, de 14 de diciembre, de Promoción de la Autonomía Personal y Atención a las Personas en Situación de Dependencia y que son origen y consecuencia de su devenir posterior. Por último, se lleva a cabo un análisis de lo que ha supuesto el cambio de baremo para la valoración y que ejemplifica el estado actual de la aplicación de la Ley tras la entrada en vigor del Real Decreto-ley 20/2012


This paper aims to highlight some of the obstacles that have had to overcome the public policies that frame the care of dependent people since 2004 until today. To do this, it is firstly carried out a terminological approach that seeks to avoid the so-called 'conceptual stretching'. Then we address some of the present difficulties in the very genesis of the Act No. 39/2006 of 14 December, on the promotion of personal autonomy and care of dependent persons which are origin and consequence of its subsequent evolution. Finally, it is carried out an analysis of what has led the change of the scale for assessing as an example of the current state of the implementation of the Law following the entry of the Royal Decree-Law 20/2012


Subject(s)
Humans , 50207 , Public Assistance/organization & administration , Public Assistance/standards , Health Promotion/legislation & jurisprudence , Legislation as Topic , Social Security/organization & administration , Public Policy/legislation & jurisprudence
5.
Eval Rev ; 39(4): 363-94, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26112294

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Welfare reform in the 1990s encouraged states and localities to contract out cash assistance services to for-profit and nonprofit firms operating within the private sector. Although privatized welfare delivery was heralded in the wake of Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF), scant empirical research evaluates welfare privatization and its potential relationship with administrative quality and program outcomes. OBJECTIVES: This study examines the relationship between administrative privatization and TANF program outcomes, including work participation activities, unsubsidized employment, employment closure, and monthly earnings, across a large sample of individual welfare clients in the state of Florida. RESULTS: The results of methodologically appropriate hierarchical linear models demonstrate that ownership variables seldom enhance the quality of TANF outcomes, suggesting that privatization alone is not an administrative panacea in human support services. Although direct privatization effects are often found to be substantively small and inconsistent in terms of service quality improvement, in closed-case models, there is evidence that nonprofit welfare delivery is associated with superior TANF employment closure outcomes.


Subject(s)
Employment/economics , Privatization/economics , Public Assistance/economics , Social Welfare/economics , Employment/standards , Employment/trends , Female , Florida , Humans , Least-Squares Analysis , Linear Models , Male , Privatization/standards , Privatization/trends , Program Development/economics , Program Development/methods , Program Development/standards , Program Evaluation , Public Assistance/standards , Public Assistance/trends , Public Policy/economics , Public Policy/trends , Social Welfare/trends
6.
Eval Program Plann ; 52: 85-95, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25989204

ABSTRACT

The use of short-term rental subsidy vouchers offers a new approach to addressing the housing needs of families facing homelessness. In Massachusetts, the Family Home pilot program placed homeless families in housing instead of shelter, providing two years of rental subsidy plus support services with the goal of enabling families to maintain market rate housing. This mixed-method case study complements staff and participant interview data with participant survey and administrative data to evaluate the implementation and short-term outcomes of Family Home in one region. Data point to improved family well-being in housing but also persistent barriers to achieving longer-term housing and economic stability. Of the families who had exited the program at the end of the study, one quarter were able to retain their housing at market rate, only 9% returned to shelter, and one in five moved in with families/friends. Lack of affordable housing in a high rental cost region and jobs that pay living wages were among the major reasons that families struggled to maintain housing. This research points to the need for integrating supportive services from the program's start, including targeted workforce development, to plan for the end of the short-term rental subsidy.


Subject(s)
Employment/economics , Family Characteristics , Ill-Housed Persons , Public Assistance/organization & administration , Public Housing/standards , Adult , Employment/standards , Ethnicity/statistics & numerical data , Female , Ill-Housed Persons/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Male , Massachusetts , Middle Aged , Pilot Projects , Program Evaluation , Public Assistance/economics , Public Assistance/standards , Time Factors , Young Adult
7.
Aust J Rural Health ; 23(4): 207-14, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25819226

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To describe the relationship between self-reported farm profitability and farmer well-being, and to explore potential implications for farmer assistance policy. DESIGN: Cross-sectional analysis of farmers from Regional Wellbeing Survey data (wave 1, 2013) and comparison between groups. PARTICIPANTS: Participants were 1172 dryland farmers (35% women) and 707 irrigators (24% women). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The Personal Wellbeing Index and the Kessler 10-item measure of general psychological distress. RESULTS: There is a consistent and significant relationship between higher profitability, greater well-being and less distress among dryland farmers and irrigators. CONCLUSIONS: The relationship between farm profitability and the well-being of Australian dryland farmers and irrigators has the potential to inform farmer assistance policy. Assistance programs can be more effective if they explicitly incorporate a profitability assessment into their targeting and eligibility requirements and a well-being component into program design and delivery. SETTING: Rural Australia. INTERVENTION: Not applicable.


Subject(s)
Agriculture/economics , Farmers/psychology , Personal Satisfaction , Public Assistance/standards , Quality of Life/psychology , Stress, Psychological/etiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Analysis of Variance , Australia , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Public Assistance/economics , Rural Population , Socioeconomic Factors , Stress, Psychological/economics , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
8.
Psychiatr Serv ; 65(3): 313-4, 2014 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24584525

ABSTRACT

The author describes the crisis in affordable housing for individuals with serious mental illness who have extremely low incomes and outlines implications for the behavioral health system. Studies have shown that nowhere in the United States can an individual with serious mental illness who is receiving Supplemental Security Income afford housing. This has contributed to compliance issues with the Americans With Disabilities Act. The failure of housing policy to effectively address the needs of individuals with serious mental illness who are in poverty is largely to blame for the most visible and costly failures attributed to the behavioral health system: institutionalization, incarceration, and chronic homelessness. It is critical for the behavioral health field to advocate for housing policies to address the housing affordability crisis.


Subject(s)
Mental Health Services/standards , Mentally Ill Persons , Public Assistance/standards , Public Housing/standards , Humans , Mental Health Services/economics , Poverty/economics , Public Assistance/economics , Public Policy , United States
9.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23543023

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Tenants of supportive housing have a high burden of chronic health conditions. OBJECTIVES: To examine the feasibility of developing a tenant-involved health promotion initiative within a "housing first" agency using a community-based participatory research (CBPR) framework. METHODS: Qualitative analyses of nine research capacity-building group meetings and fifteen individual pre- and post-interviews with those who completed a chronic disease self-management program, resulting in the development of several themes. RESULTS: Tenants of supportive housing successfully partnered with health care providers to implement a chronic disease self-management program, noting that "health care becomes 'relevant' with housing." CONCLUSIONS: Supportive housing organizations are well-situated to implement health promotion initiatives. Such publicly subsidized housing that is accompanied by comprehensive supports must also include self-management training to help people overcome both internal and external barriers to addressing chronic health needs.


Subject(s)
Health Promotion/organization & administration , Healthcare Disparities , Ill-Housed Persons , Mentally Ill Persons , Public Housing , Capacity Building/methods , Chronic Disease , Community-Based Participatory Research , Female , Health Promotion/methods , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Public Assistance/economics , Public Assistance/standards , Qualitative Research , Self Care , Social Support , United States
10.
Qual Health Res ; 23(6): 847-60, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23567297

ABSTRACT

Integrating community-based participatory research (CBPR) into traditional study designs can enhance outcomes in studies with disadvantaged groups. Little is known, however, about study participants' experiences with these approaches, the underlying processes involved in creating more positive outcomes, and whether undesirable effects on study outcomes occur simultaneously. We conducted focus group interviews with 31 disadvantaged women who participated in a CBPR-driven randomized controlled trial (RCT) both to explore their study experiences and to obtain their interpretations of select study findings. Using dimensional analysis, we found the tailored health questionnaire, treatment by study staff members, and RCT participants' understandings of and responses to randomization were salient to what women described as transformative experiences that occurred over the course of the RCT. These findings have implications for understanding how CBPR and non-CBPR aspects of interventions and study designs have the potential to affect both process and endpoint study outcomes.


Subject(s)
Community-Based Participatory Research , Cultural Competency , Health Status , Poverty/psychology , Adult , Female , Focus Groups , Health Surveys/instrumentation , Health Surveys/standards , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Interviews as Topic , Middle Aged , Public Assistance/economics , Public Assistance/standards , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
11.
Rev. clín. esp. (Ed. impr.) ; 213(3): 138-144, abr. 2013.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-111469

ABSTRACT

Fundamento y objetivo. Las administraciones han de procurar asistencia equitativa que compense los factores de resistencia, tales como las dificultades de comunicación y las derivadas del envejecimiento. Nuestro objetivo fue analizar la influencia de la dispersión y del envejecimiento de la población, sobre la tasa de realización de algunos procedimientos quirúrgicos comunes en pacientes ancianos. Población y métodos. Se utilizó la base de datos de la actividad quirúrgica del único hospital público de una provincia española para identificar las intervenciones de cataratas, cadera e implantes de marcapasos efectuadas durante el año 2010. Se calculó la tasa de realización de cada procedimiento, y la proporción de mayores de 65 años en cada municipio en función del censo del Instituto Nacional de Estadística. Como medida de dispersión se analizó el tiempo de acceso al hospital. Resultados. La población se distribuía en 339 núcleos de población, el 90% menores de 1.000 habitantes. Las poblaciones peor comunicadas eran menores (r=-0,194; p<0,0001)y tenían una proporción mayor de ancianos (r=0,406; p<0,0001). No se identificó relación entre la frecuentación de las intervenciones y el número de habitantes o el tiempo de desplazamiento. Cuando se analizó la población agrupada en isocronas de 30min tampoco se encontraron diferencias. El porcentaje de mayores de 65 años se asoció de forma independiente a la frecuentación de la catarata (beta=0,211; p<0,001), y mostró tendencia a una mayor frecuentación para intervenciones de marcapasos y cadera. Conclusiones. Con la actual organización de la asistencia, ni la dispersión ni el envejecimiento parecen reducir la frecuentación de intervenciones típicas de población anciana en el territorio analizado(AU)


Background and objective. Public administrations have to procure equitable care that compensates resistance factors such as communication problems and those arising from aging. Our objective was to analyze the influence of population dispersion and aging on the frequency rate of some common surgical procedures in elderly patients. Patients and methods. We used the database of surgical activity of the only hospital in a Spanish province to identify cataract surgeries, hip replacements and pacemaker implants performed during 2010. Using the National Statistics Institute Census, we calculated the rate for each procedure and the proportion of inhabitants over 65 in each municipality. Time needed to access the hospital by road from each municipality was used as a measure of dispersion. Results. The population was distributed into 339 population centers, 90% of which had less than 1,000 inhabitants. The worst communicated populations were smaller (r=−0.194; P<.0001) and had a higher proportion of elderly (r=0.406; P<.0001). No relationship was found between the frequentation of the selected interventions and the number of inhabitants or travel time. Similarly, no differences were found when the analysis was done by pooling the population for 30 minutes isochrones. The percentage of those over 65 years was independently associated to the frequency rate of cataract surgery (beta=0.211; P<.001) and showed a trend to increased frequency for the implantation of pacemakers and hip replacements. Conclusions. Our study shows that, with the current organization of care and in the territory analyzed, neither population dispersion nor aging seems to reduce frequentation of several interventions typical of the elderly population(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Middle Aged , Aged , Population Dynamics , Health Equity , Public Assistance/organization & administration , Public Assistance/standards , Public Assistance , Pacemaker, Artificial/trends , Pacemaker, Artificial , Hip Prosthesis/trends , Hip Prosthesis , Cataract/epidemiology , Public Assistance/trends , Analysis of Variance , Primary Health Care/methods , Primary Health Care/trends , Primary Health Care
12.
Soc Work Public Health ; 27(5): 424-40, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22873934

ABSTRACT

The authors' purpose was to examine access to Family Independence Program and Food benefits in relation to customer service and an automated helpline. In addition, participants identified impediments and limitations to the receipt of services. Two hundred forty-four surveys were mailed to recipients of over-the-counter electronic benefit transfer cards; 58 were returned. The findings indicate that when customers (age 21-92) received assistance navigating the electronic benefits transfer system from local office staff, they were able to obtain benefits successfully. Negative credit/debit card history and touchtone phones were related to difficulty using the system. The results suggest that the local office and the contracted service provider (automatic helpline) need to provide assistance that promotes greater autonomy for the customer to make successful transitions to benefits that are delivered electronically.


Subject(s)
Aid to Families with Dependent Children/statistics & numerical data , Consumer Behavior/statistics & numerical data , Electronic Data Processing/instrumentation , Food Supply/economics , Public Assistance/economics , Social Welfare/economics , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Consumer Organizations/standards , Electronic Data Processing/statistics & numerical data , Female , Food Supply/methods , Hotlines/standards , Hotlines/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Male , Michigan , Middle Aged , Program Evaluation , Public Assistance/standards , Rural Population , Social Welfare/psychology , Social Work/standards , Socioeconomic Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States , Urban Population , Workforce
13.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-84923

ABSTRACT

El objetivo de este artículo es concienciar a la Atención Primaria, Administraciones sanitarias, ayuntamientos y Asociaciones de Fibromialgia que, es posible desarrollar el Proceso Asistencial Integrado de Fibromialgia 2005 de la Consejería de Salud de Andalucía en el Distrito Sanitario Sevilla. Los recursos humanos y materiales, casi todos existen ya, solo habría que organizarlos. La Atención Primaria juega un importante papel como puerta de entrada (AU)


This article aims to raise awareness among Primary Care, Health Authorities, Municipalities and Fibromyalgia Associations that it is possible to implement the Fibromyalgia 2005 Integrated Health Process of the Andalusion Health Department in the Seville Health District. The human and material resources, already exist, and only have to be organised. Primary Care plays an important role as gateway to this process (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Primary Health Care/methods , Fibromyalgia/epidemiology , Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic/epidemiology , Medical Assistance/organization & administration , Social Work/methods , Social Work/trends , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Primary Health Care , Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic/prevention & control , Public Assistance/organization & administration , Public Assistance/standards , Fibromyalgia/nursing
14.
Fed Regist ; 75(208): 66319-41, 2010 Oct 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21033184

ABSTRACT

The Advance Planning Document (APD) process governs the procedure by which States obtain approval for Federal financial participation in the cost of acquiring automated data processing equipment and services. This final rule reduces the submission requirements for lower-risk information technology (IT) projects and procurements and increases oversight over higher-risk IT projects and procurements by making technical changes, conforming changes and substantive revisions in the documentation required to be submitted by States, counties, and territories for approval of their Information Technology plans and acquisition documents.


Subject(s)
Electronic Data Processing/organization & administration , Financing, Government/organization & administration , Information Systems/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Assistance/legislation & jurisprudence , United States Dept. of Health and Human Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Child , Federal Government , Humans , Information Systems/standards , Public Assistance/standards , Purchasing, Hospital/legislation & jurisprudence , Purchasing, Hospital/standards , State Government , United States
15.
Disasters ; 34(2): 380-401, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19863566

ABSTRACT

The 7.6 magnitude (Richter scale) earthquake that struck northern Pakistan on 8 October 2005 was devastating. This paper gauges success in targeting vulnerable families during the transition from relief to reconstruction through cash assistance provided by the Livelihood Support Cash Grants (LSCG) programme. Families without a male member, with a disabled male member aged between 18 and 60 years or with more than five children, defined as vulnerable, were provided with USD 50 per month for six months via a bank transfer. The LSCG scheme enrolled around 750,000 families and selected 267,402 vulnerable families to whom it disbursed a total of USD 86.95 million. Using a community-based survey, this paper assesses leakage and under-coverage (exclusion). Approximately 30 per cent of families received the cash grant. However, only one in two was eligible for the benefit, and one in two deserving families was excluded. This is a matter of grave concern.


Subject(s)
Disasters/economics , Earthquakes/economics , Public Assistance/economics , Single-Parent Family , United Nations , Vulnerable Populations , Adult , Case-Control Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Pakistan , Public Assistance/standards
16.
Econ Hum Biol ; 7(2): 246-58, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19540176

ABSTRACT

Obesity poses substantial costs both to the individual and society, mainly through its impact on health and labor productivity. Because obesity is more prevalent among the poor some have raised concerns that food assistance programs may encourage excess weight. This paper investigates whether the U.S. Food Stamp Program contributes to adult participants' weight as measured by body mass index (BMI). Results suggest that the typical female food stamp participant's BMI is indeed more than 1 unit higher than someone with the same socioeconomic characteristics who is not in the program. For the average American woman, who is 5 ft 4 in. (1.63 m) tall, this means an increase in weight of 5.8 pounds (2.6 kg). While this association does not prove that the Food Stamp Program causes weight gain, it does suggest that program changes to encourage the consumption of high-nutrient, low-calorie foods should be considered.


Subject(s)
Food/economics , Public Assistance , Weight Gain , Adult , Body Mass Index , Educational Status , Family Characteristics , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Obesity/economics , Obesity/epidemiology , Prevalence , Public Assistance/standards , Public Assistance/trends , Regression Analysis , United States/epidemiology
17.
Ethn Health ; 14(1): 5-25, 2009 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19152156

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Many older people in the UK require means-tested and health-related benefits to supplement low incomes in retirement and pay for additional resources required to cope with ill-health. Ethnic minority older people have lower uptake of welfare services than white older people. This study investigated routes to the service, barriers to claiming and explored the impact of additional financial resources among ethnic minority elders by evaluating a novel welfare rights advice service which facilitated access to state benefit entitlements. DESIGN: Qualitative study using data from one-to-one interviews with ethnic minority elders from Newcastle upon Tyne, UK analysed using the Framework method. Participants were recruited to this study from among ethnic minority elders attending a full benefits assessment offered by Newcastle Welfare Rights Service. RESULTS: Twenty-two South Asian participants aged between 50 and 81 were interviewed. Nineteen participants were above state retirement age, 15 of whom were on means-tested state benefits. Knowledge of state entitlements was extremely low. Sixteen qualified for non-means-tested health benefits; six qualified for further means-tested state benefits. Additional resources had a considerable impact on participants and their families. Participants could better afford essential items such as food, bills, shoes, clothes and 'one off' payments. Less stress, increased independence and better quality of life were reported. Welfare rights advice also had a positive impact on carers, none of whom knew what they or their relatives were entitled to. CONCLUSIONS: As with older people of all backgrounds, facilitating access to state benefit entitlements with appropriate services is an important way of increasing the resources of ethnic minority older people on low incomes and/or in poor health. Such services can also significantly improve quality of life for carers. As the numbers of ethnic minority older people will rise over the next few decades, it is necessary to meet this need with linguistically and culturally appropriate welfare rights services. To do otherwise will exacerbate existing income and health inequalities.


Subject(s)
Health Services Accessibility , Public Assistance/organization & administration , Social Welfare/ethnology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Asia, Southeastern/ethnology , Communication Barriers , Consumer Advocacy , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Health Services for the Aged , Health Status Disparities , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Medical Indigency/ethnology , Medical Indigency/statistics & numerical data , Middle Aged , Public Assistance/standards , Public Assistance/statistics & numerical data , Qualitative Research , Social Welfare/economics , Social Welfare/statistics & numerical data , United Kingdom
18.
Can J Diet Pract Res ; 67(2): 104-7, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16759439

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Food insecurity appears to be a growing problem for post-secondary students, but little study has been made of the 51 campus-based food banks that exist. In 2003-04, the University of Alberta Campus Food Bank (CFB) distributed hampers intended to supply four days of food to 630 unique clients, of whom 207 (32.8%) were children. The nutritional adequacy of food hampers and cost saving to students were evaluated in the current study. METHODS: Hampers prepared for one adult, and for one adult with one child, were nutritionally evaluated and scored for number of servings according to Canada's Food Guide to Healthy Eating. Two types of hampers were evaluated: those containing only non-perishable items, and those containing non-perishable and perishable items. Hamper contents were priced to establish the cost saving to students. RESULTS: The study revealed that a student with one child would receive up to 58.02 Canadian dollars worth of food in a hamper that contained perishable items. All hampers met the recommended minimum servings for each food group, but were very low in fat and protein from animal sources. CONCLUSIONS: Because students can obtain hampers only twice each month, the CFB is not the solution to food insecurity on campus. Awareness of the issue of post-secondary student food insecurity needs to be raised.


Subject(s)
Diet/standards , Food Supply , Poverty , Public Assistance/standards , Students/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Canada , Female , Food , Food Supply/standards , Humans , Male , Nutritive Value
20.
J Am Diet Assoc ; 104(5): 811-3, 2004 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15127070

ABSTRACT

Food pantries serve over 19 million Americans, yet little is known about the nutritional quality of foods distributed in pantry bags. Foods in bags from 133 clients from 19 pantry sites were itemized, and a mean site value for nutrient and food group content was calculated. If an individual consumed the pantry foods according to the Food Guide Pyramid, the bag would contain sufficient bread group foods to last approximately 7 days; vegetable and meat/protein group foods would last about 5 days, and fruit and milk group foods would last only approximately 3 days. Foods distributed were of adequate or high nutrient density for protein, fiber, iron, and folate, but were of low nutrient density for calcium, vitamin A, and vitamin C. Creative efforts are needed for pantries to procure, store, and distribute additional fruit, dairy products, and other sources of vitamins A and C and calcium.


Subject(s)
Ascorbic Acid/administration & dosage , Calcium, Dietary/administration & dosage , Dairy Products , Food Services/standards , Food/standards , Fruit , Vitamin A/administration & dosage , Consumer Behavior , Female , Humans , Male , Massachusetts , Middle Aged , Nutrition Policy , Nutrition Surveys , Nutritive Value , Public Assistance/standards
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