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Healthy Adults l Goal = »“adults” = 21-65 YO »~40-45 YO, people start taking health care seriously l __________ = signs associated with likelihood of acquiring a disease l ____ and ________ can influence most current ____________ in the U.S.
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Ten Leading Causes of Death in the U.S. (1900) RankCause of death 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Pneumonia/influenza Tuberculosis Diarrhea and enteritis Heart disease Stroke Liver disease Accidents Cancer Diphtheria Meningitis Causes in which diet plays a part Causes in which alcohol plays a part
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Ten Leading Causes of Death in the U.S. (2000) RankCause of death 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Heart disease Cancer Stroke Lung diseases Accidents Diabetes Pneumonia/influenza Alzheimer’s disease Kidney disease Septicemia Causes in which diet plays a part Causes in which alcohol plays a part
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Community Programs Targeting Adults l Food StampsSNAP l Food programs: »Commodity Supplemental Food Program »Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) »USDA Food Recovery and Gleaning Program l Community health centers l Cooperative Extension Service »EFNEP »Family Nutrition Program (FNP) l TEFAP l Medicaid l Title V MCH funds l WIC
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____________ l “Access by all people at all times to sufficient food for an active and healthy life.” »________ food »adequate and _____ food »________ »for _________ life »acquired in ____________ ways
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Poverty l Poverty guidelines »set by USDA »since 1965 »based on ____________ X 3.3 »adjusted annually according to ________________ l Thrifty Food Plan: »Emergency, short-term diet »one of 4 nutrition plans: Thrifty, Low-cost, Moderate, Liberal
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Poverty l Poverty stats »$22,050 annually for a family of four (2009) »~37,000,000 hungry in the U.S. (Census Bureau, 2007) –11% of households –1 in ___ children l The ________ the income, the _______ the nutritional status of a family
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Poverty l Poverty stats »$22,050 annually for a family of four (2009) »~46,200,000 poor in the U.S. (Census Bureau, 2010) = 15.1% (up from 14.3% in 2009) l The lower the income, the worse the nutritional status of a family
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Food Stamp Program is now SNAP l Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program l __________ program l Eligibility: »_________ gross income »_________ net income »certain exemptions to definition of net income »more income allowed if ________ in household
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Food Stamp to SNAP changes l Eligibility: »asset limit “relaxed” in 2008 l $20 million authorized for pilot projects to increase fruit and vegetable intake, improve health status, reduce obesity l Food “stamps” eliminated; all benefits by EBT
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SNAP Program l Goal = l Benefits: »provided via _______ »amount varies with income, size of household, housing costs, etc. »~ amount needed for the household unit to ________________
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SNAP Program l Excludes RTE foods, medications, pet foods, tobacco, alcohol, cleaning supplies… l Education is via state plans l http://www.ers.usda.gov/Ambe rWaves/November08/Features/ AffordHealthyDiet.htm http://www.ers.usda.gov/Ambe rWaves/November08/Features/ AffordHealthyDiet.htm
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Household expenditures l ________ income: »50% income on food, clothing, shelter (f/c/s) »16% on food l ________ income: »66% on f/c/s »23% on food l _________: »75% on f/c/s »30% on food
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Food Stamp Program l In 1970, Food Stamps served 4.3 million people a month and cost $577 million; l In 2008, SNAP served 28.4 million people a month and cost $34.6 billion l Average benefit in 2009 = $101 a month per person »$3.37 a day http://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/faqs.htm#9
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SNAP Program l Average benefit in Indiana in 2010 = $132.29 a month per person »$4.40 a day
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Homework l Work out a menu for a day »$13.20 »one person l Price the menu l Analyze the menu for nutritional adequacy »use MyPlate l Due Thursday, November 17 l (alternative is to cost and analyze one day of your typical intake. Then indicate how your food costs compare to SNAP.)
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Focus on SNAP Entitlement program? Who is eligible? What are the benefits? Are there restrictions? What is the goal/purpose? Is education mandated? Proven outcomes?
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Maximum SNAP allotment http://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/faq s.htm#9 (October 2009 through September 2010) People in Household Maximum Monthly Allotment 1 $ 200 2 $ 367 3 $ 526 4 $ 668 5 $ 793 6 $ 952 7 $ 1,052 8 $ 1,202 Each additional person... $ 150
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Persons in Family or Household 48 Contiguous States and D.C. 1 $10,830 2 14,570 3 18,310 4 22,050 5 25,790 6 29,530 7 33,270 8 37,010 For each additional person, add 3,740 2009 DHHS Poverty Guidelines http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/09poverty.shtml
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Maximum SNAP allotment http://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/faq s.htm#9 (October 1, 2011 through September 30, 2012) People in Household Maximum Monthly Allotment 1 $ 200 2 $ 367 3 $ 526 4 $ 668 5 $ 793 6 $ 952 7 $ 1,052 8 $ 1,202 Each additional person... $ 150
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Persons in Family or Househo ld 48 Contiguo us States and D.C.AlaskaHawaii 1$10,830$13,530$12,460 214,57018,21016,760 318,31022,83021,060 422,05027,57025,360 525,79032,25029,660 629,53036,93033,960 733,27041,61038,260 837,01046,29042,560 For each additional person, add 3,7404,6804,300 2010 DHHS Poverty Guidelines http://www.hhs.gov/opa/pdf/poverty-guidelines-2010.pdf
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