Publication Date
January 1, 2007
Type
Topics
Report
Using Point-of-Purchase Data To Evaluate Local WIC Nutrition Education Interventions, Feasibility Study
By Bell L, Gleason S
Abstract
The effect of nutrition education—an important component of many Federal Food Assistance programs—on participants’ food consumption behavior is difficult to ascertain. This study finds that combining point-of-purchase data with State data on the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) is a feasible method to assess behavioral changes in WIC participants. The major obstacle to using these data as a practical method of evaluating WIC participant food-purchasing behaviors is the recruitment of enough stores to allow for a representative sample of WIC participants to be included. The study found that nutrition education intervention directed at encouraging the purchase of 1-percent and skim milk, as well as low-fat cheese, did not significantly influence purchasing patterns among WIC participants.
Contractor: Health Systems Research
This research was funded by the USDA Economic Research Service.
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Date Added
March 21, 2018
Citation
Bell L, Gleason S (2007) Using Point-of-Purchase Data To Evaluate Local WIC Nutrition Education Interventions, Feasibility Study, Contractor and Cooperator Report No. 26. United States Department of Agriculture. Available online: http://handle.nal.usda.gov/10113/32797