Rutgers Medical School’s WIC program receives $597,638 grant

Rutgers New Jersey Medical School’s (NJMS) WIC Program has been awarded a $597,638 grant to implement a WIC Community Innovation and Outreach Project (WIC CIAO).

WIC CIAO is supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Service and aims to support efforts to develop, implement, and evaluate innovative outreach strategies to increase awareness, participation, and benefit redemption in the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, as well as reduce disparities in program delivery.

“Too many women and children in New Jersey are missing out on the nutrition they need in order to thrive. We are proud to be a part of this critical initiative and to identify new ways of connecting people to WIC,” Susan Stephenson-Martin, director of Rutgers NJMS WIC Program said.

The Rutgers New Jersey Medical School (NJMS) WIC agency’s project has three goals:

Increase WIC awareness and enrollment among the underserved Portuguese families and immigrant families in the Northern part of Newark, New Jersey (Ironbound district);

Increase enrollment/retention of participants by collaborating with Greater Newark Health Care Coalition (GNHCC) to strengthen point of service agencies/community-based organizations’ knowledge of WIC and ability to assist clients with WIC navigation; and

Increase redemption of WIC benefits by surveying and educating existing WIC participants and vendors.

In New Jersey’s Essex County, WIC provides healthy food, nutrition education, breastfeeding counseling, and community support for income eligible women who are pregnant or have infants or children up to five years old.

Reaching more families with WIC will have positive impacts on the community. WIC has provided benefits, which include safer pregnancies, with fewer premature births and infant deaths, improved dietary outcomes for infants and children, better maternal health, and enhanced performance at school for children, among other benefits. In addition to health benefits, WIC participants showed significant savings in health care costs when compared to non-participants.

In total, there are 36 WIC CIAO awardees made up of WIC state and local agencies, including tribal nations, and nonprofit entities and organizations.