Reynolds Megan M, Fox Ashley M, Wen Ming, Varner Michael W
Department of Sociology, University of Utah, United States.
Department of Public Administration and Policy, University at Albany, United States.
SSM Popul Health. 2020 Mar 25;11:100573. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2020.100573. eCollection 2020 Aug.
The Supplementary Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) is a critical lifeline for millions of low-income US families, but some studies suggests that it may inadvertently increase obesity risk. Building on research contesting the SNAP-obesity link, we examine the effect of SNAP participation on BMI among multiyear participants at varying levels of SNAP benefit levels to provide some of the first evidence on the relationship between SNAP participation, state-level SNAP resources, and body weight. We focus on children given the strong links between early-life obesity and later-life health.
Linking state-level data on SNAP benefit levels with three waves of longitudinal individual-level data from the Child Development Supplement of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we use child- and state-level fixed effects to examine whether exogenous differences in SNAP benefit allotments influence the relationship between SNAP participation and weight gain.
Lower SNAP benefit levels were associated with only modest increases in BMI among children; higher benefit levels showed no association with BMI.
Although concerns that more food assistance promotes obesity have spurred calls for cuts in the SNAP program, we find the opposite - that SNAP participation is associated with an increase in childhood BMI only when benefit levels are low. This study adds to the mounting evidence suggesting that SNAP does not cause obesity. It also contributes to the literature on the political economy of health, especially that pertaining to social policy variation across US states.
补充营养援助计划(SNAP)是数百万美国低收入家庭的关键生命线,但一些研究表明,该计划可能会无意中增加肥胖风险。基于对SNAP与肥胖之间联系提出质疑的研究,我们研究了不同SNAP福利水平下多年参与者中SNAP参与对体重指数(BMI)的影响,以提供一些关于SNAP参与、州级SNAP资源与体重之间关系的初步证据。鉴于早期肥胖与后期健康之间的紧密联系,我们将重点放在儿童身上。
将州级SNAP福利水平数据与收入动态面板研究儿童发展补充调查的三轮纵向个体层面数据相链接,我们使用儿童和州层面的固定效应来检验SNAP福利分配的外生差异是否会影响SNAP参与与体重增加之间的关系。
较低的SNAP福利水平仅与儿童BMI的适度增加相关;较高的福利水平与BMI无关。
尽管担心更多的食品援助会导致肥胖促使人们呼吁削减SNAP计划,但我们发现情况恰恰相反——只有当福利水平较低时,SNAP参与才与儿童BMI的增加有关。这项研究进一步证明了SNAP不会导致肥胖。它也为有关健康政治经济学的文献做出了贡献,特别是与美国各州社会政策差异相关的文献。