• Visit
  • Apply
  • Give

School of Education

In 2014, over 49 million Americans in low-income households struggled to put food on their tables, and 46 million Americans participated in the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). In the same year, 95 percent of Americans under the age of 50 did not eat the recommended amounts of fruits and vegetables, and over two-thirds of adults were classified as overweight or obese.

When a fast food “value” meal is often cheaper and more accessible than fresh fruit and vegetables, it is easy to see how the additional expense can make poor nutrition both a health and economic concern.

Through a new partnership and a $3.77 million USDA Food Insecurity Nutrition Incentive (FINI) grant, the University of Delaware’s Center for Research in Education and Social Policy (CRESP) will help address these interconnected issues.

CRESP is partnering with Wholesome Wave, a nonprofit organization that makes locally-grown food available to underserved families through nutrition incentive programs at farmers markets, community health centers, neighborhood stores and hospital systems.

Wholesome Wave’s FINI grant will help food-insecure families in 17 states and the District of Columbia gain access to fresh fruits and vegetables through discounts and incentive programs.

This grant is designed to:

  • assist 110,000 SNAP consumers;
  • partner with 32 community-based nonprofit organizations; and
  • benefit over 3,400 small and mid-sized farm vendors.

As a subgrantee, CRESP will assess the fruit and vegetable purchase and consumption of participating SNAP consumers in order to better understand the nutritional impacts, costs and outcomes of these initiatives at farmers markets.

“This is an exciting partnership that will help us identify new ways to encourage families to eat more nutritious foods,” said Allison Karpyn, associate director of CRESP.

The center will assess the incentive programs through sophisticated statistical techniques and a multi-site randomized controlled trial. This three-year project will represent the nation’s largest randomized controlled trial of the impact of incentives for fruits and vegetables at farmers markets.

“Our goal is not only to understand how much of a difference incentives make but also to learn how much of a difference varied incentive levels may have — comparing, say, a $1 discount versus a $2 discount,” explained Karpyn.

Read the full UDaily article on CRESP’s participation in this initiative here.

Post by Jessica Henderson