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  Vol. 163 No. 11, November 2009 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Estimating the Risk of Food Stamp Use and Impoverishment During Childhood

Mark R. Rank, PhD; Thomas A. Hirschl, PhD

Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2009;163(11):994-999.

Objective  To estimate the lifetime risk that an American child will reside in a household receiving food stamps and, as a result, will encounter poverty and a heightened exposure to food insecurity.

Design  Thirty years of longitudinal data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics survey data set.

Setting  Nationally representative sample of the US population.

Participants  Approximately 90 000 childhood years of information are pooled together to create a series of life tables that span the ages of 1 to 20 years.

Main Outcome Measure  Self-reporting measure of whether survey households received the Food Stamp Program during the prior year.

Results  Between the ages of 1 to 20 years, nearly half (49.2%) of all American children will, at some point, reside in a household that receives food stamps. Households in need of the program use it for relatively short periods but are also likely to return to the program at several points during the childhood years. Race, parental education, and head of household's marital status exert a strong influence on the proportion of children residing in a food stamp household.

Conclusions  American children are at a high risk of encountering a spell during which their families are in poverty and food insecure as indicated through their use of food stamps. Such events have the potential to seriously jeopardize a child's overall health.


Author Affiliations: George Warren Brown School of Social Work, Washington University, St Louis, Missouri (Dr Rank); and Department of Development Sociology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York (Dr Hirschl).



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RELATED ARTICLE

Children of the Recession
Paul H. Wise
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2009;163(11):1063-1064.
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Children of the Recession
Wise
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2009;163:1063-1064.
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