| Literature DB >> 31630308 |
Debra J Pelto1, Alex Ocampo1, Olga Garduño-Ortega1, Claudia Teresa Barraza López1, Francesca Macaluso1, Julia Ramirez1, Javier González1, Francesca Gany2.
Abstract
To examine nutrition benefit under-enrollment in Latinx American immigrant families, we administered a survey to 100 adults attending a NY Latinx American community serving organization. We used a logistic regression approach to analyze misinformation impact on enrollment, and examined non-enrollment explanations, among participants in whose families a child or pregnant or breastfeeding woman appeared SNAP- or WIC-eligible. Among households (N = 51) with ≥ 1 SNAP-eligible child, 49% had no child enrolled. Reasons included repercussion fears (e.g. payback obligation, military conscription, college aid ineligibility, child removal, non-citizen family member penalties), and logistical barriers. In multivariable regression models, having heard the rumor that SNAP/WIC participation makes unauthorized status family members vulnerable to being reported to the government was associated with an 85% lower enrollment rate (OR 0.15, CI 0.03, 0.94). Misinformation impedes nutrition benefit participation. A multi-level intervention is necessary to inform potential applicants and providers regarding eligibility criteria and erroneous rumors, along with an informed discussion of the risks versus benefits of using resources, especially as public charge criteria change.Entities:
Keywords: Immigration; Nutrition; Public charge; SNAP; WIC
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31630308 PMCID: PMC8238138 DOI: 10.1007/s10900-019-00765-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Health ISSN: 0094-5145