Project:
Patterns of Food Stamp and WIC Participation and their Effects on the Health of Low-Income Children
Year: 1999
Research Center: Joint Center for Poverty Research, University of Chicago and Northwestern University
Investigator: Lee, Bong Joo, Lucy Mackey-Bilaver, and Robert M. Goerge
Institution: Chapin Hall Center for Children, University of Chicago
Project Contact:
Bong Joo Lee, Ph.D.
Chapin Hall Center for Children
University of Chicago
Chicago, IL 60637
bjlee@chmail.spc.uchicago.edu
Summary:
The primary purposes of this study are to examine: 1)
the patterns of program participation in the Food
Stamp Program (FSP) and the Special Supplemental
Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children
(WIC) during 1990-98, the time of welfare reform in
Illinois and 2) the effects of WIC on young children’s
health outcomes. The authors use a unique linked data
set based on population-level administrative data on all
births, food stamp and WIC participation, and
Medicaid eligibility and claims in Illinois between
1990 and 1998.
Lee et al. estimate that about 65 percent of all children
born in Illinois during the study period and observed
for 5 years (i.e., those born between 1990 and 1993)
received either WIC, food stamps, or Aid to Families
with Dependent Children (AFDC)/Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) by age 5.
While this overall program participation rate changed
very little across birth cohorts, the authors found a
considerable shift in participation patterns across the
three programs. As welfare reform was implemented
in Illinois, both FSP and AFDC/TANF participation
rates declined substantially, while WIC participation
rates continued to increase. Further, most of the
decrease in food stamp participation was due to drops
in entries to TANF.
The authors found some evidence to suggest that in
recent years, families have been forgoing food stamps
and turning more to WIC for essential food items for
their young children. Increases in WIC funding alone
do not explain the increase in WIC participation during
the study period, as the rate of WIC funding increase
declined while the rate of WIC participation increase
continued to climb. They also found that spells of participation
for both food stamps and WIC have become
shorter in recent years, although shorter spells are
more noticeable in the Food Stamp Program than in
WIC.
Two findings relate to the effects of WIC on health
services and outcomes in this study:
- Among children enrolled in Medicaid, WIC
participants are significantly less likely to be
diagnosed with health problems associated with
inadequate nutrition (failure to thrive and nutritional
deficiencies) than are nonparticipants. However,
WIC participation had no effect on the probability
of a child subsequently being diagnosed with
anemia.
- Children in WIC are more likely to receive
preventive health care services, measured as an
initial well-child exam received through the Early
Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment
Program (required of State Medicaid programs
through Title XIX of the Social Security Act),
than are those not in the WIC program.
Lee et al. conclude that their findings of positive WIC
program effects combined with declining rates of participation
in the Food Stamp program suggest a growing
need for coordination among the assistance programs
to best meet the food and nutritional needs of
low-income families with young children.