SNAP Emergency Allotments, Emergency Rent Assistance, Rent Burden, and Housing and Food Security, June 2022-May 2023.

Publication date: Aug 29, 2024

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) emergency allotments and emergency rent assistance provided support to low-income households. Rent burden, a form of housing insecurity, can severely limit household resources, which, in turn, affects health equity. We explored whether these policy interventions equitably supported households that were or were not experiencing rent burden. We used data from the US Household Pulse Survey (June 2022-May 2023) to examine whether associations between emergency support policies and indicators of food and housing security differed according to household rent burden status. We modeled each outcome (food sufficiency or being current on rent) as a function of policy exposure (SNAP emergency allotments or emergency rent assistance), rent burden, and their interaction. We included demographic characteristics, state of residence, and survey cycle as covariates. We modeled each outcome and policy exposure combination separately. Receiving emergency allotments (72. 4% vs 67. 2% for SNAP participants in states with and without emergency allotments, respectively) and emergency rent assistance (64. 5% vs 57. 6% for households that received and were waitlisted/denied assistance, respectively) were associated with greater food sufficiency. The relationship between emergency allotments and food sufficiency was stronger in rent-burdened households; however, emergency rent assistance supported food sufficiency to a greater extent in non-rent-burdened households. Emergency rent assistance supported households in being current on rent (78. 7% vs 56. 4% for households that received and were waitlisted/denied assistance, respectively) and supported being current on rent to a greater extent in non-rent-burdened households than in rent-burdened households. The relationship between emergency support policies and food or housing security differed according to whether households were experiencing rent burden. Associations were sometimes stronger in less economically constrained conditions. These results indicate an opportunity to better design policies to support low-income households, address food and housing security, and ultimately decrease the prevalence of chronic disease.

Concepts Keywords
Covid Adult
June COVID-19
Nutrition Family Characteristics
Pandemic Female
Food Assistance
Food Security
Food Supply
Housing
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Poverty
SARS-CoV-2
United States

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Emergency
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease MESH housing insecurity
disease VO Equity
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease MESH chronic disease

Original Article

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