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Food Insecurity and Overweight in WIC Clients

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Title: Focus groups in action: A practical guide Author: Dean Torkelson Last modified by: bob Created Date: 3/12/2005 4:12:02 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Food Insecurity and Overweight in WIC Clients


1
Food Insecurity and Overweight in WIC
Clients
  • A Community Nutrition Project by
    University of Washington Students
  • Winter 2005

2
  • The purpose of this project is to examine the
    relationships between food insecurity and
    overweight in English speaking WIC clients so
    that food assistance programs can be optimally
    designed to reduce prevalence of obesity while
    encouraging food security.

3
Groundwork
  • Lynne Smith
  • Human subjects approval
  • Consent form development
  • Recruitment protocol
  • IBB forms and IRB questions
  • Lisa DiGeorgio and Donna Oberg
  • Location of WIC sites
  • Interactions with WIC staff
  • Initial presentation to this class
  • Donna Johnson
  • Development of class project

4
Where we started
  • Providing background information on food
    insecurity and obesity
  • Writing a plan for focus groups on food
    insecurity and obesity
  • Preparing a focus group procedure manual
  • Conducting a pilot focus group

5
What is Food Insecurity?
  • Food insecurity exists when the availability of
    nutritionally adequate food, or the ability to
    acquire nutritionally adequate food in socially
    acceptable ways, is limited or uncertain.
  • Prevalence
  • 11 of all US households (2003)
  • 12 of Washington State households (2002)
  • 54 of King County WIC households (prelim)

6
Who is at risk for food insecurity?
  • Households with incomes at or below 185 of the
    poverty line
  • Households with children under 18, headed by a
    single woman
  • Hispanic or African-American households

7
Who is obese?
  • Low income to poor adults tend to be more obese
    than higher income adults
  • Obesity more prevalent in women than men
  • Percentage of obesity higher in Hispanic and
    African-American populations

8
Possible mechanisms for a food insecurity
obesity link
  • Physiological factors
  • Psycho-social factors
  • Socio-economic factors

9
Thoughts about a food insecurity-overweight
relationship among Seattle-King County WIC
population
  • Plan for focus groups
  • Protocol for focus groups

10
Before Plan
Determine GOALS
Designate ROLES
Decide WHO should be invited
Think about INCENTIVES
RECRUIT participants
CONTACTING participants
11
Day of Plan
Setting up
Meeting and Greeting
Signing Consent Forms
Taking Notes

Wrapping-Up
Debriefing
12
AFTER THE FOCUS GROUP Plan
TRANSCRIBE Focus Group
READ Transcript
Select ANALYSIS Method
WRITE UP Report
PRESENT Findings
13
PilotWhat we learned
  • Recruitment process
  • Conducting focus groups
  • Transcription

14
In Summary
  • Background research, focus group procedures, and
    conducted a pilot at the Eastgate WIC clinic
  • Shared our knowledge and trained ourselves to
    conduct the research
  • Got started

15
Recruiting for focus groups
  • Each group toured the facilities, taught the
    staff how to recruit and determined specific
    logistics for each site
  • -Eastgate
  • -Renton
  • -Kent
  • Recruited English speaking WIC clients who were
    over 18.
  • -Used a 25 Safeway gift card as an incentive for
    our clients.

16
(No Transcript)
17
Conducting the focus groups
  • Two sessions at each clinic on February 18th,
    2005
  • Moderator conducted with at 1-2 note-takers in
    the room
  • Worked thru the assigned questions in discussion
    format with 2-8 participants
  • Also collected demographic data from a
    questionnaire

18
(No Transcript)
19
A note about the questions
  • The questions were designed to address the issues
    without making the participants feel
    uncomfortable about their personal situation.
    The purpose of the questions were to get
    information on the following

20
  • Participants knowledge of health effects of both
    food insecurity and weight status
  • Reasons for food insecurity
  • Coping strategies
  • WICs role
  • General experiences, observations and ideas

21
After the focus groups
  • Demographic data compiled
  • Transcription of the raw data and note-takers
    notes on non-verbal communication incorporated
    into the raw transcripts
  • Analysis team

22
Demographics
23
Analysis
  • A subset of the class did the analysis
  • Looked for major themes over all of the
    transcriptions from each site
  • Summarized them in a document

24
Results of Analysis of transcripts
  • Main findings- 4 major themes
  • 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

25
Lack 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.

26
Stress and fear of hunger
  • Participants identified a relationship between
    stress, hunger, and overweight
  • A fear of future hunger can lead to overbuying
    and over-eating 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.

27
Poor quality of food in emergency food programs
  • Participants look to food assistance programs to
    get enough food to feed their families
  • They often perceive food from these programs 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.

28
Lack 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 didnt 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.

29
WIC focus group findings compared to the existing
literature
  • New relationships identified
  • Use of emergency food programs by the food
    insecure may contribute to overweight because of
    the poor food quality in these programs
  • Exercise is recognized as a way to prevent
    over-weight, but resources to being able to
    exercise are limited
  • 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

30
Targeted Interventions
  RECOMMENDATION RECOMMENDATION RECOMMENDATION RECOMMENDATION RECOMMENDATION
  Access Access Access Education Education
CONCERN Food PA Services Nutrition PA
Lack of time money X X X X X
Stress food insecurity X   X X  
Use Quality of food assistance X   X X  
Lack of exercise resources   X X   X
31
Potential Types of Interventions
  • Four main categories
  • Improve Access to healthy foods
  • Improve Access to physical activity
  • Provide Education about how to eat healthy on a
    budget
  • Provide Education about physical activity

32
Potential Types of Interventions
  • Four main categories
  • Improve Access to healthy foods
  • Improve Access to physical activity
  • Provide Education about how to eat healthy on a
    budget
  • Provide Education about physical activity

33
Improving Access to Healthy Foods(Potential
partners)
  • Farmers Market Coalitions
  • Transportation services
  • Community Centers
  • Community gardens
  • Food banks, churches, community centers, and
    other emergency food assistance programs
  • Storage facilities
  • Worksites

34
Improving Access to Healthy Foods(WIC)
  • Increase flexibility in WIC food package
  • Continue to advocate for implementation of EBT
    card system
  • Expand WIC Farmers Market Program
  • Provide information about emergency food services
  • Continue to offer emergency food vouchers

35
Potential Types of Interventions
  • Four main categories
  • Improve Access to healthy foods
  • Improve Access to physical activity
  • Provide Education about how to eat healthy on a
    budget
  • Provide Education about physical activity

36
Improving Access to Physical Activity (Potential
Partners)
  • Physical activity programs/Exercise facilities
  • Transportation services
  • Community Centers
  • Community Gardens
  • Worksites
  • Parks and Recreational Services

37
Improving Access to Physical Activity(WIC)
  • Provide classes, referrals to classes,
    scholarships, and activities that a mother and/or
    her child can do together
  • 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

38
Potential Types of Interventions
  • Four main categories
  • Improve Access to healthy foods
  • Improve Access to physical activity
  • Provide Education about how to eat healthy on a
    budget
  • Provide Education about physical activity

39
Nutrition Education(Potential Partners)
  • Farmers Markets
  • Food assistance programs/Food banks
  • Community Gardens
  • Worksites
  • Policy makers

40
Nutrition Education(WIC)
  • Distribute meal planning and budgeting info
    booklets
  • Offer workshops- portion size, reading food
    labels, food variety
  • Utilize group classes to engage low-income
    families in discussions about healthy eating
  • Employ social marketing activities
  • Establish Mother support groups

41
Potential Types of Interventions
  • Four main categories
  • Improve Access to healthy foods
  • Improve Access to physical activity
  • Provide Education about how to eat healthy on a
    budget
  • Provide Education about physical activity

42
Physical Activity Education(Potential Partners)
  • Community centers, health centers, and schools
  • Physical activity programs/Exercise facilities

43
Physical Activity Education(WIC)
  • Provide more information about exercise resources
    for WIC mothers
  • age-appropriate information about exercise for
    their children
  • low-cost physical activity resources available in
    the community
  • walking/biking route maps, neighborhood
    recreational parks
  • Increase availability of physical activity groups
    that parents and children can do together
  • Offer post-partum workout videos

44
Summary
Recommendations for WIC are focused on a need for
access and education regarding food and physical
activity. We have few truly evidence-based
interventions in this area which is why we need
more studies that look for the real
physiological, psycho-social, and socio-economic
determinants of food insecurity and obesity. It
is our hope that the results of this study can be
used to improve the services that WIC offers to
program participants. -Nutrition 531 class
voice
45
Special love goes to
  • The Donnas, Lisa DiGiorgio, Lynne Smith,
    Michele Rimmer Renton WIC staff, Ewa Baldyze
    Kent WIC staff, Saskia Schaeffer, Katie Imberg,
    Eastgate WIC staff

46
References
  1. ERS. Household Food Security in the United
    States, 2003. http//www.ers.usda.gov/publications
    /fanrr42/
  2. Olson CM. Nutrition and health outcomes
    associated with food insecurity and hunger. J
    Nutr. 1999129(2S Suppl)521S-524S.
  3. Adams EJ, Grummer-Strawn L, Chavez G. Food
    Insecurity is Associated with Increased Risk of
    Obesity in California Women. J Nutr.
    2003133(4)1070-1074.
  4. 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. 200480(5)1372-137
    8.
  5. 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. 2001155(10)1161-1167.
  6. DOH. The Health of Washington State-Nutrition.
    http//www.doh.wa.gov/HWS/doc/RPF/RPF_Nut.doc
  7. Drewnowski A, Specter SE. Poverty and obesity
    the role of energy density and energy costs. Am J
    Clin Nutr. 200479(1)6-16.
  8. 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.
    20028(2)141-5.
  9. Bjorntorp P. Do stress reactions cause abdominal
    obesity and comorbidities? Obes Rev.
    20012(2)73-86.
  10. 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.
  11. 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.
  12. Krueger, RA. Moderating Focus Groups. from Focus
    Group Kit. Sage Publications. 1998.
  13. Nutrition 531 Community Nutrition. University of
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