An investigation of a novel milk allergy-friendly food supplement program
Michael A. Golding, Manvir Bhamra, Zoe Harbottle, Moshe Ben-Shoshan, Jennifer D. Gerdts, Leslie E. Roos, Elissa M. Abrams, Sara J. Penner, Jo-Anne St-Vincent, Jennifer L. P. Protudjer

TL;DR
A new program providing milk allergy-friendly food supplements was tested to reduce costs and improve food security for families with young children who have dairy allergies.
Contribution
The novel milk allergy-friendly food supplement program was developed and piloted for low-income families managing dairy allergies in young children.
Findings
Participants reported reduced indirect food costs and zero costs related to lost time from work or school at the end of the program.
Despite some cost benefits, food insecurity remained high among participants during the study period.
The program helped keep grocery costs below inflation rates.
Abstract
Compared to households not managing food allergy, households managing food allergy are faced with greater direct and indirect costs. To address these cost burdens, we developed and piloted a milk allergy-friendly food supplement program for lower- and middle-income households managing a dairy allergy in a child age <6 years. Herein, we aimed to evaluate to the impact of this program on food costs, food security, and caregiver mental health using a longitudinal design. Participants living in or near the city of Winnipeg, in Manitoba, Canada were recruited from January to February 2022 via social media, word-of-mouth, and a database maintained by the principal investigator. Consenting participants took part in a 6-month allergen-friendly food supplement program that provided them with biweekly deliveries of allergen-friendly foods free of charge. To evaluate the impact of the program on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPotato Plant Research
