Abstract

The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) provides breastfeeding support and free formula to low-income participating infants in the U.S. Literature has consistently documented worse breastfeeding outcomes in WIC infants and children than in non-participants, although self-selection bias poses a challenge in examining the relationship between WIC participation and breastfeeding in low-income mother-child dyads. The WIC program adopted a comprehensive food package revision in 2009, the first one in four decades. Since that time, few national studies have examined the relationship between WIC participation and breastfeeding while controlling for the endogeneity of WIC participation with the propensity score method. This paper applied an instrumental variable (IV) approach on a large, nationally representative survey sample of children, the National Immunization Surveys (NIS), to examine the relationship between WIC participation and breastfeeding among children born between 2005 and 2014. We identified state Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) enrollment rates and SNAP Policy Indices as valid IVs to address WIC participation endogeneity. Without the IVs, WIC participation had a significantly negative relationship with breastfeeding. After addressing endogeneity using the IVs, the relationship became insignificant in the whole sample and in the subpopulations across race/ethnicity and child gender. The neutrality of WIC participation on breastfeeding is important for policy makers to understand in seeking to improve breastfeeding among WIC participants.

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