Home-delivered meal programme participants may be at greater risk of malnutrition without the meal programme

Public Health Nutr. 2021 Oct 8;25(7):1-8. doi: 10.1017/S1368980021004274. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objectives: (1) To examine total quality of foods consumed on the day a home-delivered meal (HDM) of the Older Americans Act Nutrition Program (OAANSP) was served, and when a HDM was not served; and (2) to estimate proportion of HDM participants and non-participants meeting the daily average recommendations for guidance-based foods and nutrients.

Design: Cross-sectional study.

Setting: Data were obtained from the national 2015-2017 Outcomes Evaluation Study of HDM participants in the USA.

Participants: Adults aged 67 years and older (n 1227), 620 HDM recipients and 607 matching non-participants examined in three groups: (1) meal recipients who received a HDM on the day of the 24-h dietary recall; (2) no-meal recipients who did not receive a HDM on the day of the recall and (3) matching HDM non-participants.

Results: Healthy Eating Index (HEI)-2010 scores of HDM participants were significantly lower on the day the meal was not received compared with when a meal was received (52·5 v. 63·4, P < 0·0001). There was no significant difference in the total HEI-2010 scores of HDM meal recipients and HDM non-participants. Despite the meal, less than 20 % of HDM participants and non-participants met the 2010-Diet Guidelines for Americans recommended average daily intake for fruit, vegetables, dairy, protein foods and solid fats.

Conclusion: HDM participants' diet quality is poorer when they do not receive a meal putting them at increased risk of malnutrition. Expanding the OAANSP to offer meals on weekends and/or to include more than one meal/d is recommended to improve the diet of this vulnerable population.

Keywords: Diet quality; Food assistance; Food security; Home-delivered meals; Older adults.