Study: In US, 90 percent of black children will be fed by food stamps
By Agence France-Presse
Monday, November 2nd, 2009 -- 9:09 pm
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Nearly
half of all US children, including an overwhelming majority of black
children, will eat meals at some point during their childhood paid for
by food stamps, an indicator of poverty, a study showed Monday.
"If you get food stamps, you are by definition in poverty and your
household doesn't have many assets," said Mark Rank, a co-author of the
study with Thomas Hirschl of Cornell University.
"The fact that half of American children at some time during their
childhood find themselves in this position really ought to be a wake-up
call to America," he told AFP.
The study found that 49.2 percent of all American children will at some point live in a home that receives food stamps.
Among black children and children living in single-parent
households, the percentage is much higher: around 90 percent live in
homes that receive food stamps at one stage or another.
And nearly all black children in single parent homes where the head
of household has less than a high school education live in financial
and food insecurity during part of their childhood, the study says.
The study, which was published Monday in the American Medical
Association's Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, is based
on an analysis of a 32-year study of some 4,800 US households.
It concluded that American children face the highest levels of
poverty and social deprivation of any children growing up in Western
developed nations, and they have the flimsiest social safety net to
fall back on.
"It's always been weak, particularly compared with European
countries or Canada or other industrialized countries," said Rank, a
professor at the school of social work at Washington University in St.
Louis, Missouri.
"One of the reasons why our rates of poverty are so high is because
we do so little in terms of trying to protect families from getting
into poverty. We have to cast our safety net wider," he said.
Poverty and food insecurity are "two of the most detrimental
economic conditions affecting a child's health" and tag 22 billion
dollars a year onto US health care costs, the study said.
"Children in poverty are significantly more likely to experience a
range of health problems, including low birth weight, lead poisoning,
asthma, mental health disorders, delayed immunization, dental problems
and accidental death," it said.
"There's a strong connection between poverty, health and mental
health," said Rank and the detrimental effects of growing up poor, even
if just for a short period, often carry over into adulthood, he said.
An earlier study conducted by Rank and Hirschl showed that half of
American adults resort to food stamps to put a meal in their stomachs.