Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University,722 West 168th Street, New York, NY 10032,USA.
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health,Boston, MA,USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2019 Aug;22(12):2248-2259. doi: 10.1017/S1368980019001071. Epub 2019 May 20.
The present study explored chronic disease management over the monthly benefit cycle among primary food shoppers from households receiving Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits in Philadelphia, PA, USA.
In-depth interviews, participant observation and surveys were conducted with the primary food shopper of SNAP households.
Interviews and surveys were conducted in a clinical setting at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, at participants' homes, and in food procurement settings including grocery stores, food pantries and soup kitchens.
Eighteen adults who received SNAP; five with a diet-related chronic condition, five managing the chronic condition of a family member and thirteen with overweight or obesity.
All households had at least one member with a chronic disease or condition. Households reported that the dietary demands of managing chronic illnesses were expensive and mentally taxing. Food and financial shortfalls at the end of the benefit cycle, as well as reliance on charitable food assistance programmes, often had negative impacts on chronic disease self-management.
Drawing from nearly 50 h of in-depth qualitative interviews with SNAP participants, the study highlights the dual cognitive burden of poverty and chronic disease and elucidates the particular challenges of food procurement and maintenance of diet quality throughout the benefit month faced by SNAP households with diet-related chronic diseases. Interventions targeted at reducing the cost of medically appropriate, healthy foods may help to improve chronic disease self-management within SNAP populations.
本研究探讨了美国宾夕法尼亚州费城接受补充营养援助计划(SNAP)福利的家庭中主要食物购买者的月度福利周期内的慢性病管理情况。
对 SNAP 家庭的主要食物购买者进行了深入访谈、参与观察和调查。
访谈和调查在费城儿童医院的临床环境中、在参与者家中、以及在食品采购场所(包括杂货店、食品分发处和施粥所)进行。
18 名接受 SNAP 福利的成年人,其中 5 人患有与饮食相关的慢性病,5 人管理家庭成员的慢性病,13 人超重或肥胖。
所有家庭至少有一名患有慢性病或疾病的成员。家庭报告称,管理慢性病的饮食需求既昂贵又耗费精力。福利周期结束时的食物和资金短缺,以及对慈善食品援助计划的依赖,常常对慢性病自我管理产生负面影响。
本研究从近 50 小时对 SNAP 参与者的深入定性访谈中得出结论,强调了贫困和慢性病的双重认知负担,并阐明了 SNAP 家庭中与饮食相关的慢性病患者在整个福利月份面临的采购食物和维持饮食质量的特殊挑战。针对降低医疗上适当的、健康食品成本的干预措施可能有助于改善 SNAP 人群中的慢性病自我管理。