USA TODAY US Edition

Healthy food out of reach for many

Study finds every county in US affected

- Zlati Meyer

Every county in America is home to people who don’t have enough money to buy healthy food. That’s what a new study by Feeding America, a Chicagobas­ed national network of 200 food banks.

Within the country’s 3,142 counties, food insecurity rates range from 3% in Steele County, North Dakota, to 36% in Jefferson County, Mississipp­i, the Map the Meal Gap 2019 report found.

The data, collected in 2017, also revealed that 97% of U.S. counties are home to people who are food insecure and likely ineligible for most federal nutrition assistance programs, such as the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, known colloquial­ly as food stamps, and the Special Supplement­al Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, often called WIC.

The health implicatio­ns for the 40 million people in the U.S. – or 1 out of 8 – are sizable, the study said. Not being able to buy healthy food prompts people to eat cheaper, less nutritious food, which can lead to diet-related illnesses, such as diabetes. That leads to higher health care costs and potentiall­y a harder time working – two more pressures on an already food-strained budget.

“Counties with the highest rates of food insecurity – those in the top 10% of all counties – tend to have similarly poor economic indicators: higher rates of unemployme­nt and poverty and lower homeowners­hip and median income as compared with all counties,” the report found.

According to lead researcher Craig Gundersen, during the Great Recession, food insecurity rose 30% from 2007 to 2008. Then, when the economy got better, the rates didn’t decline, rather they stayed the same from 2009 to 2014. “Only in the last few years did they decline,” said the professor of agricultur­al and consumer economics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “The levels today are still higher than they were in 2007. While in many dimensions the United State recovered from the Great Recession, the most vulnerable among us still haven’t recovered.”

Feeding America, who’s produced the annual study for the past nine years, said it used publicly available state and local data from the U.S. Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Here are three other key findings from the report:

Children suffer

Kids are more like than the general population in every state to be food insecure – 1 out of every 6 children or 12.5 million kids. An estimated 750,000 of them live in Los Angeles and New York City. The rate of food insecurity for children ranges from 6% in Slope County, N.D., to 40% in East Carroll Parrish, Louisiana.

Food-insecure children face a higher risk of stunted growth, asthma, oral health issues, failing to meet developmen­tal milestones, lower math and reading scores and behavioral issues.

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