ERS Reports
The WIC Program: Background, Trends, and Issues—This report presents comprehensive background information on the WIC program—operations, history, program trends, and the characteristics of the population served. Issues related to program outcomes and administration are also examined.
Effects of Food Assistance and Nutrition Programs on Nutrition and Health: Volume 3, Literature Review—This report provides a comprehensive review and synthesis of published research on the impact of USDA’s food and nutrition assistance programs, including WIC, on participants’ diet and health outcomes. The report is one of four volumes produced by a larger study, including Volume 1, Research Design; Volume 2, Data Sources; and Volume 4, Executive Summary of the Literature Review.
Review of the Dietary Reference Intakes
for Selected Nutrients: Application Challenges and Implications for
Federal Food and Nutrition Policy—Dietary
Reference Intakes (DRIs) are the most recent set of nutrient-based reference
values, which, together with recommended dietary assessment methods,
are being used to update estimates of nutrient adequacy. Recent estimates
suggest both dramatic dietary deficiencies and excesses for selected
nutrients among some population subgroups. This report takes a critical
look at the studies and methods used to set DRIs. The findings show that
errors in dietary recall data—either underreporting or overreporting of
intakes—may partially explain the results. Because the DRIs are
used by food and nutrition assistance programs to set nutritional objectives,
establish program benefits, and evaluate program outcomes, it is important
to understand how DRIs are derived and how to interpret the results of
dietary assessments.
Using Point-of-Purchase Data To Evaluate
Local WIC Nutrition Education Interventions: Feasibility Study—The
effect of nutrition education—an important component of many
Federal food assistance programs—on
participants’ food consumption behavior is difficult to ascertain.
This study finds that combining point-of-purchase data with State data
on the WIC program is a feasible method to assess behavioral changes
in WIC participants. The major obstacle to using these data to evaluate
WIC participant food-purchasing behaviors is the recruitment of enough
stores to include a representative sample of WIC participants. The study
found that nutrition education intervention directed at encouraging the purchase
of 1-percent and skim milk, as well as low-fat cheese, did not significantly
influence purchasing patterns among WIC participants.
Nutrition and Health Characteristics
of Low-Income Populations: Volume II, WIC Program Participants and
Nonparticipants—Data from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES-III), conducted in 1988-94, were used to
compare the nutrition and health characteristics of participants and
nonparticipants in the WIC program.
This research was designed to establish a baseline from which to monitor
the nutritional and health characteristics of WIC participants and nonparticipants
over time. Variables compared included measures of usual intake of food
energy and nutrients, Healthy Eating Index scores, health-related behaviors,
health status, conditions and risks, and access to health insurance coverage.
Assessing the Nutrient Intakes of Vulnerable
Subgroups—This
study is a comprehensive analysis of the nutrient adequacy of segments
of the population at risk of inadequate nutrient intake, excessive intake,
or dietary imbalances, based on the Continuing Survey of Food Intakes
by Individuals conducted in 1994-96 and 1998. Population subgroups include adolescent
females, older adults, children and adults at risk of overweight, individuals
living in food-insufficient households, low-income individuals, and individuals
targeted by and participating in food and nutrition assistance programs
such as WIC. The study adds to a growing literature that uses current,
improved knowledge of nutrient requirements and recommended nutrient
assessment methods to analyze nutrient intakes. The study indicates generally
inadequate intakes of key micronutrients, especially magnesium, calcium,
folate, and vitamin E; energy intakes less than recommended energy requirements
for adults; consumption of too much food energy from fat and not enough
from carbohydrates; and inadequate intakes of fiber. Children—especially
infants and young children—have diets that are more nutritionally adequate
than those of adolescents and adults.
Children's Consumption of WIC-Approved
Foods—This study compared
consumption patterns of WIC children with those of three different comparison
groups: eligible nonparticipating children living in non-WIC households,
eligible nonparticipating children living in WIC households, and children
living in households whose income is too high to be eligible for WIC.
The study provides strong evidence that participation in the WIC program
increases consumption of at least some types of WIC-approved foods.
The Food Assistance Landscape—This periodical provides a brief
overview of USDA's domestic food and nutrition assistance programs. Each issue contains
recent program statistics, such as expenditure, participation, and benefit
levels, as well as information on related economic and social indicators,
such as unemployment rates, income growth, and food price inflation.
It also discusses a recent ERS study that examined patterns of entry
into and exit from the Food Stamp Program.
WIC and the Retail Price of Infant
Formula—Rebates from infant
formula manufacturers to State WIC agencies support over one-quarter
of all WIC participants. However, WIC and its infant formula rebate program
may significantly affect the infant formula prices faced by non-WIC consumers.
This report presents findings from the most comprehensive national study
of infant formula prices at the retail level. For a given set of wholesale
prices, WIC and its infant formula rebate program resulted in modest
increases in the supermarket price of infant formula, especially in States
with a high percentage of WIC formula-fed infants. However, lower priced
infant formulas are available to non-WIC consumers in most areas of the
country, and the number of lower priced alternatives has increased.
Innovative WIC Practices: Profiles
of 20 Programs—WIC provides
supplemental food, nutrition education, and social service referrals
to low-income pregnant, breastfeeding, and postpartum women, infants,
and children younger than age 5. With its rapid expansion, the WIC program
has come under increased scrutiny and new directions have been suggested.
This study examines a range of innovative practices at 20 State or local
WIC agencies. The study focuses on practices in three main areas: breastfeeding
promotion and support (including peer counseling and programs for high-risk
groups), nutrition and health education (including obesity prevention,
preventive health care, and staff training), and service delivery (such
as home and workplace visits). For each innovative program, the report
provides background information and discusses the source of the innovation,
key challenges, implementation lessons learned, evidence of success,
and the feasibility of replicating the practice.
Interstate Variation in WIC Food Package
Costs: The Role of Food Prices, Caseload Composition, and Cost-Containment
Practices—Food prices
within States affect average monthly costs of State food benefits packages
provided by the WIC program more than variations in WIC caseload composition
do. In addition, cost-containment practices by State WIC agencies provide
different levels of cost savings in different areas, contributing to
interstate variation in benefits package costs. This study is one of
the few to examine the degree to which food prices, caseloads, and cost-containment
practices influence costs of State WIC food benefits packages. Because
limited data exist on the actual food items that WIC participants purchase,
the study used a scanner dataset of supermarket transactions and other
sources to estimate the average monthly cost of WIC food benefits in
several areas.
Assessment of WIC Cost-Containment
Practices: Final Report—WIC
provides both nutrition education and supplemental foods for pregnant,
breastfeeding, and postpartum women, infants, and children. State WIC
agencies have implemented practices designed to reduce the cost of food
packages containing these prescribed foods. One such practice is negotiating
rebate contracts with manufacturers of infant formula. Additional practices
include limiting authorized vendors to stores with lower food prices;
limiting approved brands, package sizes, forms, or prices; and negotiating
rebates with food manufacturers or suppliers. These cost-saving practices
may inadvertently counter the program's goal of providing supplemental
foods and nutrition education. Based on a review of cost-containment
practices in six States, the study concludes that (1) cost-containment
practices reduced average food package costs by 0.2 to 21.4 percent,
depending on practices implemented and local conditions; (2) the cost-containment
practices had few adverse outcomes for WIC participants; and (3) administrative
costs of the practices were low, averaging about 1.5 percent of food
package savings.
Linking WIC Program Data
to Medicaid and Vital Records Data: Phase II Report, Data Development
Initiatives for Research on Food Assistance
and Nutrition Programs, Final Report—This report follows up on
a proposal to create a national database that links State data from the
WIC program with Medicaid and vital records data. The linked information
would create new opportunities for Federal and State program administrators,
as well as independent researchers, to examine a number of factors related
to program participation and dynamics. The report provides an implementation
plan for creating a national database, including potential costs, benefits,
and alternatives. The initiative is one of three that have the potential
to improve the usefulness and cost-effectiveness of research on Federal
food assistance and nutrition programs.
Amber Waves
Amber Waves, ERS’s magazine,
is a window into the agency’s broad research
program, covering production agriculture, food safety and nutrition,
the food industry, rural economies, agricultural trade, and farm-related
environmental issues. Published five times a year in web and print editions,
Amber Waves contains in-depth feature articles, research findings, previews
of research in the works, and statistics, including a variety of articles
related to WIC and other food and nutrition assistance programs. The following articles
relate specifically to WIC:
RIDGE (formerly Small Grants) WIC Projects
FANRP’s
RIDGE Program has funded
several research projects of relevance to WIC, including those listed
below:
Bitler, M., and J. Currie. Medicaid
at Birth, WIC Take Up, and Children’s
Outcomes. A Final Report to the IRP/USDA Small Grants Program.
Chatterji, P., K. Bonuck, S. Dhawan, and N. Deb. WIC
Participation and the Initiation and Duration of Breastfeeding.
Dewey, K.G., M.J. Heinig, and K. Kavanagh-Prochaska. Educational
Intervention to Modify Bottle-feeding Behaviors Among Formula Feeding
Mothers in
the WIC Program: Impact on Infant Formula Intake, Weight Gain, and Fatness.
Herman, D., G. Harrison, A. Afifi, and E. Jenks. Are
Economic Incentives Useful for Improving Dietary Quality Among WIC
Participants and Their
Families?
Ishdorj, A., H.H. Jensen, and J. Tobias. Intra-Household
Allocation and Consumption of WIC Approved Foods.
Joyce, T., and D. Gibson. The
Use of Twins to Understand the Effect of WIC on Birth Outcomes.
Kranz, S., and J. Findeis. Policy
Implications of WIC or Food Stamp Program Participation on Children’s Diet Quality and the Risk for Childhood
Obesity.
Swann, C. The
Dynamics of WIC Prenatal Participation.
Journal Articles
Bitler, M.P., and J. Currie. "The Changing Association Between Prenatal Participation in WIC and Birth Outcomes in New York City: What Does It Mean?" Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 24(4):687-90, Fall 2005.
Bitler, M.P., and J. Currie. "Does WIC Work? The Effects of WIC on Pregnancy and Birth Outcomes," Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 24(1):73-91, Winter 2005.
Bonuck, K., M. Trombley, K. Freeman, and D. McKee. "Randomized, Controlled Trial of a Prenatal and Postnatal Lactation Consultant Intervention on Duration and Intensity of Breastfeeding Up to 12 Months," Pediatrics, 116(6):1413-26, December 2005.
Dennison, B., L. Edmunds, H. Stratton, and R. Pruzek. "Rapid Infant Weight Gain Predicts Childhood Overweight," Obesity, 14(3):491-99, March 2006.
Edmunds, L., M. Woelfel, B. Dennison, H. Stratton, R. Pruzek, and R. Abusasha. "Overweight Trends among Children Enrolled in the New York State Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children," Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 106(1):113-17, January 2006.
Herman, D.R., G.G. Harrison, and E. Jenks. "Choices Made by Low-Income Women Provided with an Economic Supplement for Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Purchase," Journal of the American Dietetic Association, Vol. 106(5):740-44, May 2006.
Jacknowitz, A., D. Novillo, and L. Tiehen. "Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children and Infant Feeding Practices," Pediatrics, 119(2):281-89, February 2007.
Joyce, T., D. Gibson, and S. Colman. "The Changing Association Between Prenatal Participation in WIC and Birth Outcomes in New York City," Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 24(4):661-85, Fall 2005.
Murphy, S., J. Foote, L. Wilkens, P. Basiotis, A. Carlson, K. White, and K. Yonemori. "Simple Measures of Dietary Variety Are Associated with Improved Dietary Quality," Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 106(3):425-429, March 2006.
Nord, M., and E. Leibtag. "Is the 'Cost of Enough Food' Lower in Rural Areas?" The Review of Regional Studies, 35(3):291-310, Winter 2005.
Rose, D., J. Bodor, and M. Chilton. "Has the WIC Incentive to Formula-Feed Led to an Increase in Overweight Children?" Journal of Nutrition, 136(4):1086-90, April 2006.
Schneider, J., M. Fujii, C. Lamp, B. Lonnerdal, K. Dewey and S. Zidenberg-Cherr. "Anemia, Iron Deficiency and Iron Deficiency Anemia in 12-36-Month Old Children from Low-income Families," American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 82(6):1269-75, December 2005.
Skalicky, A., A. Meyers, W. Adams, Z. Yang, J. Cook, and D. Frank. "Child Food Insecurity and Iron Deficiency Anemia in Low-Income Infants and Toddlers in the United States," Maternal Child Health Journal, 10(2):177-85, March 2006.
Swann, C. "The Timing of Prenatal WIC Participation," The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy, 7(1), January 2007.
Whitaker, R., and S. Orzol. "Obesity Among US Urban Preschool Children: Relationships to Race, Ethnicity, and Socioeconomic Status," The Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 160(6):578-84, June 2006.
Whitaker, R., S. Phillips, and S. Orzol. "Food Insecurity and the Risks of Depression and Anxiety in Mothers and Behavior Problems in Their Preschool-Aged Children," Pediatrics, 118(3):e859-868, September 2006.
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