Qualitative Study of Participation Facilitators and Barriers for Emergency School Meals and Pandemic Electronic Benefits (P-EBT) in an Urban Setting during COVID-19

Author:

Cadenhead Jennifer W.ORCID,McCarthy Julia E.ORCID,Nguyen Thanh Thanh T.ORCID,Rodriguez MichelleORCID,Koch Pamela A.ORCID

Abstract

During the COVID-19 pandemic, significantly fewer of New York City’s (NYC’s) 1.1 million public school children participated in emergency grab-and-go meals—heightening the risk of inadequate nutrition security for many of NYC’s most vulnerable residents. This study sought to examine student families’ facilitators and barriers to participation in the grab-and-go meal service and their experiences with pandemic-electronic benefit transfer (P-EBT) funds, a cash benefit distributed when schools were closed. We recruited 126 parents of children in NYC public schools who had participated in the grab-and-go service. Using opened-ended questions, we interviewed 101 parents in 25 1-h online focus groups. We identified four main themes which broadly impacted school meal participation: communication, logistics, meal appeal, and personal circumstances. Key facilitating subthemes included clear communication, ease of accessing sites, and high variety. Key sub-themes negatively impacting participation included limited communication and low meal variety. Accurate, timely communication; easily accessible distribution locations; and convenient distribution times could have increased participation and satisfaction. For P-EBT, parents welcomed the funds and used them readily, but some experienced difficulties obtaining payments. The simultaneous inclusion of community-based research in the evaluation of emergency feeding programs could improve future outcomes for school meal participation and electronic benefits.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

Reference28 articles.

1. State of New York Executive Order 202.4. 3 March 2020

2. Food to Go: Did NYC Open Grab & Go Sites in Areas with the Greatest Need?;New York City Independent Budget Office,2020

3. Addressing Food Insecurity through a Health Equity Lens: a Case Study of Large Urban School Districts during the COVID-19 Pandemic

4. What Is Nutrition Security?;United States Department of Agriculture

5. The Campaign for Universal Free Lunch in New York City: Lessons Learned

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