Abstract
What is already known on this subject?: Poverty-reduction efforts that invest in children have especially significant positive benefits by producing positive economic, health, developmental, and upward mobility outcomes. SNAP is among the leading poverty-reducing policies and enrolls the largest number of participants for both nutritional and non-nutritional benefits. What this study adds?: To our knowledge, no study has synthesized the non-nutritional impact of SNAP on family health. We found that SNAP positively impacts family health across five categories of the Family Stress Model (Healthcare utilization for children and parents, Familial allocation of resources, Impact on child development and behavior, Mental health, and Abuse or neglect). Further, we present four policy actions resulting from this scoping review that deserve attention from policymakers, program administrators, and retailer establishments: distribute benefits more than once a month; increase SNAP benefits for recipients; soften the abrupt end of benefits when wages increase; and coordinate SNAP eligibility and enrollment with other programs.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Evans, R. W., Maguet, Z. P., Stratford, G. M., Biggs, A. M., Goates, M. C., Novilla, M. L. B., … Barnes, M. D. (2024, March 1). Investigating the Poverty-Reducing Effects of SNAP on Non-nutritional Family Outcomes: A Scoping Review. Maternal and Child Health Journal. Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-024-03898-3
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.