Title: Barriers to Retention Children on WIC, NYS, 1999
1(No Transcript)
2NYS DOH, Division of NutritionEvaluation and
Analysis Unit
- Barriers to Retention
- NYS WIC Infants and Children
- Presented by Mary Lou Woelfel
- Authors Mary L. Woelfel, Howard Stratton,
Robert Pruzek, Donald Hernandez, Gene Shackman,
ShuGuang Chen - A USDA WIC Special Project Grant. Awarded
to the NYS DOH DON by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service, Office
of Analysis and Evaluation, under grant
59-3198-7-525. Study results are sole
responsibility of authors and may not reflect the
view of the funding agency.
3Barriers to retention, NYS WIC
- Introduction
- In U.S. and NYS WIC caseload declining
slightly -
- In NY, older the child, lower the retention
-
- Many eligible children do not receive WIC
services
4Barriers to retention, NYS WIC
- Background
- NY 999 WIC provided services to 469,000
clients on average each month -
- Approximately 290,000 are infants or children
-
- NYS provider network 99 agencies
with oversight of 570 sites
5Barriers to retention, NYS WIC
- Objectives
- Identify barriers to retention among WIC
infants and children - Identify barriers specific to check
redemption patterns - Present barriers by race/ethnicity
6Barriers to retention, NYS WIC
- Methods
- Focus groups with WIC participants, guidance
team, lit. review used to identify potential
barriers - Identified barriers used to design 20-minute
survey - Survey administered one-on-one at WIC sites
- Outsourced to ensure candid response
- From perspective of WIC participant
- 11 volunteer agencies 41 sites
- 3167 parents/caretakers of WIC infants/children
7Barriers to retention, NYS WIC
- Data collection and data analysis
-
- Response rate 80 completion rate 94
- Data collected March through Dec 1999
- Informed consent obtained
- Representative of 11 agencies
- Chi-square, logistic regression
-
8Barriers to retention, NYS WIC
- Measured variables
- Demographic and economic
- Public assistance programs
- Fast food consumption
- Food insecurity
- Employed due to welfare reform
- Benefits of WIC
- 68 individual level barriers
- Dependent variables
- Cashing or picking up checks
-
9Figure 1. Barriers by organization category
Scheduling
Facility
Getting there
Waiting
GeneralBureaucracy
Agency staff
Certifi-cation
NutritionEducation
Food procurement
Food package
10Specific barrier items by organization category
- Scheduling. Inconvenient times, work problems,
rescheduling, no specific appointment time,
separate family appointments. - Getting there. Parking, neighborhood safety,
transportation - Facility. Overcrowding, noisy, lack of
childrens activities. - Waiting - Too long, gt 1 hr for checks gt 1 hr to
recert. - Bureaucracy. Rules unclear, rigid, changing
food package, bringing child, paperwork,
replacing checks, blood work, proxy. - Nutrition Education. Long, boring, repetitive,
useful
- Agency staff. Negative treatment, customer
friendly, speaking your language, insensitive to
culture, not listening, giving conflicting info. - Food procurement. Store policy diff. than WIC
policy, negative treatment by store staff food
availability-finding food, food not in stock, not
getting all WIC food. Food package size-matching
check to container in store, cereal box size,
milk size. - Food package. Variety, quantity (too little, too
much of each item)
11Table 1. Demographic/economic characteristics of
study participants
- ()
- lt 1 year 26
- 1 year old 22
- 2 year olds 19
- 3 year olds 18
- 4 year olds 15
- White non-H 46
- Black non-H 34
- Hispanic 15
-
-
- ()Rent 78
- Single 65
- Employed 45
- lt 50 pov 28
- lt 100 pov 64
- HS or less 64
- Food insecure 10
12Table 2. Public assistance
- ()
- Medicaid 57
- TANF 30
- Food stamps 40
- Head Start 8
- Free/Reduced lunch 18
- WIC and other food programs
- WIC only 51
- WIC plus 1 35
- WIC plus 2 11
- WIC plus 3 3
13Table 3. Number and participant type on WIC
- ()
- Number in household on WIC
- 1 on WIC 56
- 2 on WIC 33
- 3 on WIC 9
- 4 or more 2
- WIC composition
- Infant only 24
- Child only 60
- Infant child 16
- Missed pickup/cash checks 46
14Table 4. Socio-demographics by race/ethnicity.
NYS WIC
- W B H () () ()
- Rent 69 85 91
- Single 54 79 72
- lt 50 poverty 22 32 28
- lt 100 poverty 58 67 72
- Employed 45 50 34
- HS or less 63 61 71
- Medicaid 52 61 63
- TANF 19 39 46
- Food stamps 31 49 51
- Free/Red lunch 17 21 15
- Food insecurity 8 8 18
- Missed pickup/cash checks 44 50 41
15Barriers to retention, NYS WIC
- Results GO LA STAFF!
- In upstate and NYC, across all
- organization categories, local
- WIC agency staff received the
- highest ratings.
-
-
16Barriers to retention, NYS WIC
-
- The most important benefit of WIC
participation from participants
perspective - In Upstate Good nutrition and formula
- In NYC Formula and milk
-
-
17Table 5. Barriers to retention
- Barrier Percent reporting barrier
- Waiting too long 48
- Waiting area/no child activities 42
- Waiting area/overcrowded/noisy 36
- Waiting more than 1 hr to recertify 27
- Cereal box size 41
- Matching check to foods 23
- Too little WIC formula 38
- Too little WIC juice 27
- Nutrition education repetitive 33
- Nutrition education boring 27
- Different policies WIC/Vendor 29
18Table 6. Most frequently cited barriers to
retention by Race
- Barrier White Black Hisp. Other
- Waiting too long 47 50 46 51
- Waiting area lacking childrens activities
38 50 39 41 - Not getting right cereal box size 43 41 35 41
- Too little formula 36 40 43 40
- Waiting room overcrowded and noisy 31 40 41 35
- Nutrition education repetitive 34 35 29 23
- Stores having different WIC policies 26 35 25 2
8 - Too little juice 24 29 26 30
- Waiting more than one hour to re-certify 25 27 3
4 29 - Nutrition education boring 26 29 25 22
- Matching check amount to food container 24 24 17
26
19Table 7. Barriers by race/ethnicityStatistically
significant differences among less cited barriers
- W() B() H()
- Language barrier 0 0 7
- Inconsistent w/culture diet 3 6 10
- Too little milk 13 10 18
- Too little dry beans 4 10 9
- Getting off work 12 19 15
- Transportation 7 11 14
- Safety 4 3 8
20Figure 1. Barriers by organization category
Wait too long
Overcrowded, noisy nothing for kids to do
Schedule
Facility
Getting there
Waiting
Boring, repetitive
Agency staff
Certifi-cation
NutritionEducation
GeneralBureaucracy
Cereal box size
Too little food
Food procurement
Food package
21Table 8. Barriers and check patterns
- Failure to pick-up or cash checks reported by
- 46 of parent/caretakers
- Variables asso. w/failure to pick-up/cash chks
- Childs age
- As childs ages, failure to pick-up/cash checks
increases - Parents age
- Younger parents more likely to fail to pick
up/cash checks. - Problems getting checks replaced
- Problems rescheduling
- Too much milk
22Highlights
- Barriers to retention - participants perspective
- Long waits, overcrowded, noisy facilities
with nothing for kids to do - Nutrition education boring and repetitive
- Cereal box size problems matching voucher
to cereal box size (Cost containment effort) - Too little formula
- Too little juice
-
-
23Highlights
- Race/ethnic similarities
- Whites, Blacks, Hispanics cite same top
barriers - Race/ethnic differences
- Inconvenient hrs for employed Blacks
- More Blacks work than whites and Hispanics.
- Language and food barriers for Hispanics
- Failure to pick up/cash checks
- Childrens food package
- Young mothers
24Thank you