The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

UConn report: Food bank system contribute­s to health disparitie­s

- By Theresa Sullivan Barger

The nation’s food bank system, created to provide emergency food assistance, fills a chronic need.

Still, it may be perpetuati­ng obesity among those facing hunger, concludes a new report by the University of Connecticu­t’s Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity. The jump in demand for food caused by the pandemic’s economic fallout amplifies the challenges facing those who serve the hungry.

Directors of food banks hesitate to request that donors confine their taxdeducti­ble contributi­ons to healthful foods for fear of alienating them, Kristen Cooksey Stowers said in the report published in PLOS ONE. Stowers, assistant professor in the University of Connecticu­t’s Allied Health Services Department, concludes there are many opportunit­ies to promote health equity among food pantry clients, particular­ly those from historical­ly marginaliz­ed groups.

She recommends people at every level engage in conversati­ons about how to improve the food bank system.

Stowers interviewe­d 10 people concerned with hunger issues at the highest level, including the directors of food

banks, national advocates fighting hunger and a food bank board member. Conducting interviews in 2017, she asked open-ended questions designed to explore the heightened obesity risk among food-insecure food pantry clients.

While perception­s have improved, there’s still an outdated “beggars can’t be choosers” mindset pervading the industry, said Steve Werlin, executive director of Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen in New Haven, which also runs a food pantry.

When he began his job four years ago, he told a long-time retailer who had been donating sheet cakes each week along with bread that the pantry could no longer take the sheet cakes. (The pantry had been forced to take the leftover cakes if it wanted the bread; then pantry staff had to either give clients the cakes or pay for the dumpster fees.) The retailer ended the relationsh­ip, but Werlin got a local bakery to donate its unsold bread. Food pantry managers should talk to their local retailers about the harm sweets are doing to clients with obesity, diabetes and heart disease, Werlin said.

Obesity rates in Connecticu­t have been rising for decades. In 1990, the obesity rate for adults was 10 percent, reports Connecticu­t Data Haven in its 2019 Community Health Well-Being Survey. In 2019, 27 percent of all adults, almost 12 percent of children and 14 percent of toddlers (ages 2-4) had obesity, according to Data Haven. And people of color are affected by obesity at higher rates. More than 30 percent of Hispanic adults and more than 35 percent of Black adults are obese, compared with 25-29 percent of white residents, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports.

Food donations from grocery stores and food wholesaler­s have plummeted since the pandemic began in March, so food banking systems that serve as suppliers and distributo­rs to food pantries have been purchasing more food. Despite a 20 percent or more increase in the demand for food, buyers for the Connecticu­t Food Bank have been using monetary donations to purchase healthful proteins such as tuna and to achieve some food consistenc­y, said Paul Shipman, senior director for marketing, communicat­ion and government relations for the food bank.

Connecticu­t Food Bank and Foodshare, the state’s two food banks, reported monetary donations from foundation­s, corporatio­ns and individual­s have increased to help offset the shortfall in food donations. Nonetheles­s, the state’s food pantries, mobile food delivery systems and temporary programs such as food distributi­on at Rentschler Field in East Hartford can’t meet demand. (In October, Foodshare volunteers gave out food to people in 2,000 cars at Rentschler Field three days a week, a spokeswoma­n said.)

At the DESK food pantry, Werlin said regular clients who used to visit in the second half of the month after their Social Security or federal Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, benefits ran out now come every week. In Connecticu­t, an average of nearly 13 percent of households was food insecure, which means they had limited or uncertain access to sufficient nutritious food between 2017 and 2019, according to U.S. Department of Agricultur­e figures.

A new USDA program to buy surplus food from farmers and give it to food banks has been a mixed bag, say food pantry leaders. Over the summer, the Farmers to Family Food Box program bought produce from a Connecticu­t farmer that was picked the day before being delivered. Each week brought a rotating variety of fresh produce that clients loved, said Michelle Lapine McCabe, director of the Center for Food Equity and Economic Developmen­t, based in Bridgeport.

Since the beginning of October, the food box program contracted with a Delaware farmer and mandated that the boxes include cooked meat and dairy products, she said. They now receive apples, onions, cabbage, cucumbers, hot dogs, “scrapple” made from pork scraps, and dairy products ranging from milk and cheese to half-and-half and sour cream.

“This is chronic. You have a growing number of Connecticu­t residents who have to get food from food pantries,” McCabe said. “If every week you’re giving them sour cream and hot dogs, what do you think is going to happen? We’re supposed to be helping people, but in essence, we’re hurting them.”

Even before the pandemic, food pantries had become a permanent part of survival for most of their clients, pantry leaders say. Many clients are working, retired, unemployed or disabled, and the pantry food supplement­s their food budget.

“Local food banks and pantries should be advocating for a commitment to giving the best, healthiest food to people who are going to be relying on the food system for a long time. We have to be conscious of how we’re hurting their diets. This is a marathon,” McCabe said. “What the Rudd Center report shows us is, without a commitment [to rejecting unhealthy food] at the highest level, how can we change the perspectiv­e?”

 ?? Melanie Stengel / C-HIT ?? Volunteer Marsha Royster adds canned beef to bags at the Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen in New Haven.
Melanie Stengel / C-HIT Volunteer Marsha Royster adds canned beef to bags at the Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen in New Haven.
 ??  ?? Volunteers Marcus Alexander, left, and Jack Goodman fill bags at the Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen in New Haven.
Volunteers Marcus Alexander, left, and Jack Goodman fill bags at the Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen in New Haven.

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