March 26, 2013

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Ban on food stamps leads to hunger, HIV risk among former drug felons

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Convicted drug offenders who are denied government food benefits upon release from prison are at greater risk of engaging in dangerous, sexual risk behaviors in order to obtain food, Yale researchers have found. Their pilot study appears in the journal AIDS Education and Prevention.

Each year, nearly three-quarters of a million people are released from U.S. prisons. Many are already highly vulnerable to homelessness, , and hunger due to uncertainty about how to find and pay for (known as "food insecurity").

Making matters worse, many individuals convicted of drug felonies are banned for life by a 1996 federal law from obtaining food assistance via the Assistance Program (SNAP), formally known as , and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), formerly known as Aid to Families with Dependent Children. States were allowed to opt out of the federal law. Only 16 states and the District of Columbia did; 24 others implemented a modified version of the ban; 10 kept it fully in place for life, even for mothers and women who are pregnant.

A possible result of this policy is that many released , particularly women and mothers, are turning to prostitution and other behaviors that put them at risk for HIV and other negative outcomes in order to obtain food.

The Yale researchers worked in collaboration with All of Us or None, a California organization that fights discrimination against current and former inmates and their families, to study the link between food insecurity and sexual risk behaviors among returning prisoners. They surveyed 110 individuals recently released from prisons in Connecticut and California, which have partial bans, and Texas, which has an outright, mandatory lifetime ban on food assistance for drug convicts.

Some of their findings were:

This is the first study to examine the association between and specifically among former inmates. "These individuals are incredibly vulnerable when they are released from prison. If they cannot get government food assistance, they are much more likely to be hungry and thus engage in dangerous sexual behavior in exchange for money or food for themselves and their children," said first author Dr. Emily Wang, assistant professor of internal medicine at Yale School of Medicine.

The New York Times recently published an editorial suggesting that the federal food stamp ban be eliminated. It reads, in part, "… it is already clear that the bans are counterproductive and that it is time for states that have not completely lifted them to do so."

Journal information: AIDS Education and Prevention

Provided by Yale University

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