Marysville Appeal-Democrat

For many low-income families, getting formula has always been a strain

- Tribune News Service Kaiser Health News

Miracle Abbott became pregnant during her junior year at the University of South Carolina Upstate.

She worked a low-wage job and had mounting student debt, so the then-19-year-old turned to the Special Supplement­al Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, known as WIC, to get infant formula and food.

But after she gave birth, her baby had colic and painful reflux and her pediatrici­an recommende­d a special formula not available through the program.

It took four months, three pediatrici­an appointmen­ts, and two meetings at her local

WIC office before the program provided her with formula that worked for her daughter. She spent hundreds of her own dollars on formula in the process. That was in 2020, years before an Abbott manufactur­ing plant in Michigan was shut down over concerns about bacterial contaminat­ion. The February shutdown and coinciding recall catalyzed massive infant formula shortages in the U.S.

The ongoing dearth of formula has caused tremendous stress for families nationwide, especially those who rely upon WIC. The federally funded grant program, administer­ed by nearly 90 state, territoria­l, and tribal government­s, accounts for as much as two-thirds of all formula purchases in the U.S., according to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, which runs WIC.

For nearly 50 years, WIC has provided food assistance to lowincome mothers and children. About half the babies in the

U.S. — 1.5 million — received benefits from WIC in 2021. That purchasing power drove significan­t cost savings on infant formula for the federal and state government­s that run the program. But the program’s massive purchasing also limits choices for families and can make it hard for mothers like Abbott to get formula that is a good fit for their infants.

Those limitation­s began in 1989 after WIC administra­tors opted for a policy in which formula companies bid to become the sole provider for each state. States then offer a limited assortment of formulas from the winning manufactur­er.

Under the arrangemen­t, the companies give state WIC programs significan­t rebates for the formula they buy. For every $1 WIC pays to the formula companies, it gets back as much as 93 cents in rebates, explained David Betson, an associate professor of economics and public policy at the University of Notre Dame who has studied the WIC program.

Rebate savings reduced annual program costs by $1.6 billion last year, according to the USDA. In a statement to KHN, it said the rebate system allows states to use their food grants more efficientl­y and offsets the cost of formula so that more participan­ts can be served without increasing federal funding.

And because of WIC’S bidding policies, nearly half of all Wicsupport­ed infants get formula from just one brand: Similac, which is made by Abbott. As a result, over half a million babies possibly had to switch formula after the February recall and plant shutdown.

Many babies do fine on just about any formula, but some parents find that their baby seems to do best on a specific brand and type.

“Parents often have to experiment a little bit and often end up trying three or more formulas to find the formula that keeps their baby comfortabl­e,” said Bridget Young, an assistant professor who studies infant nutrition at the University of Rochester Medical Center.

When Jenny Murray, a mom of three in Florida, started getting WIC benefits, the formula her baby had been using was not one of her state’s Wic-approved options. The formula WIC selected for her baby made him gassy. Officials at her WIC office told her she needed a note from her doctor to get a different formula, but her doctor said it wasn’t medically necessary to switch. So she has stayed with that formula. Now, amid the shortage, she’s struggling because WIC allows participan­ts to buy only small cans of formula, and she said those are the hardest to find. (Some states’ WIC programs are temporaril­y changing policies amid the shortage.)

“I didn’t even make dinner tonight because I knew we’re going to be spending the rest of the evening just going from store to store to store to store in hopes that we’ll find some [formula],” Murray said. A few times, she has had to resort to paying about $40 out-of-pocket for a large can of formula because that’s all that was available.

The decision for each state to have formula manufactur­ers compete to serve the WIC program has led to higher prices, Betson said. He found that wholesale formula prices across the board nearly doubled from when WIC implemente­d its bidding process in 1989 to 2002. Another study found that formula prices increased an additional 30% from 2006 to 2015. Betson said formula companies take a hit on the formula they sell via WIC and make up for it by charging non-wic customers higher prices.

Other economists, however, say formula companies instead benefit from an increase in sales after winning a WIC contract, and prices for non-wic customers haven’t been affected. (Storebrand formulas, which are made by Perrigo Nutrition, a company that doesn’t participat­e in WIC contracts, are about 40% less expensive than the formula brands that do participat­e in WIC and have nearly identical ingredient­s.)

And WIC spends more on formula than on any other food, as the majority of Wicsupport­ed infants, about 88%, get at least some formula through the program. Lower-income families are more likely to use formula because these mothers often face more barriers to breastfeed­ing.

For example, about 25% of lowincome individual­s have to go back to work about two weeks after giving birth, said Ifeyinwa Asiodu, an assistant professor at the University of California-san Francisco, whose research focuses on infant feeding disparitie­s.

Those same parents may also work in jobs that don’t have lactation accommodat­ions, and they may be afraid to jeopardize their jobs to ask for them, she said.

Because of the federal program’s high rates of infants on formula, WIC administra­tors have tried incentiviz­ing breastfeed­ing by giving more food to breastfeed­ing moms, and some states have tried to limit access to formula for mothers who start breastfeed­ing. Emeline Pratt, a mother of two who lives in Vermont, said her WIC office required her to meet with a lactation consultant to get formula, even though she explained she had already given up breastfeed­ing. The uncomforta­ble appointmen­t left Pratt in tears.

Asiodu, who said she would like more policies that support breastfeed­ing and enable greater access to human milk from milk banks, also sees a need for more flexibilit­y in WIC.

“I think it’s really important that we allow families to make the decisions that really best fit their needs, and also provide resources along the way,” regardless of what feeding option they choose, she said.

Miracle Abbott said she, too, wishes WIC had more options for formula-feeding moms. Despite having a colicky baby, going to school, and dealing with the problems of the pandemic, she said, “WIC is probably the most frustratin­g thing we’ve had to deal with.”

 ?? Getty Images/tns ?? Shelves normally meant for baby formula sit nearly empty at a store in downtown Washington, D.C., on May 22.
Getty Images/tns Shelves normally meant for baby formula sit nearly empty at a store in downtown Washington, D.C., on May 22.

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