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Welfare Foods and Healthy Start

8 December 2006

Benefits and tax credits briefing cover

CAB evidence on the provision of milk tokens

Welfare food and healthy start (Adobe Acrobat Document 61kb)

Summary

Good nutrition during pregnancy and in the early years is vital to the health and development of a baby.  Milk provides an essential part of both an expectant mother's and a young child's diet.  Many families on low incomes rely on milk tokens supplied to provide the means for ensuring their children have an adequate diet.  On average, over 700,000 milk tokens are issued to families across the UK every month, and roughly one in five children under the age of five depend on them.

The Welfare Foods Scheme, provided through the Department of Health (DH), aimed to help pregnant women and children under five in low-income families to eat healthily.  It provided tokens with which to buy milk, infant formula, and vitamins.  From November 2006, Healthy Start replaced the Welfare Foods Scheme.  Healthy Start has been piloted in Devon and Cornwall from November 2005.

Under the Welfare Foods Scheme, pregnant women and parents were supposed to receive tokens for either seven pints of milk or 900 grams of infant formula each week.  Under the Healthy Start scheme they should receive a voucher worth £2.80 per week which can be spent on milk, infant formula and fruit and vegetables.  For each child under one they should receive an exta voucher.

However, since changes to the administration of milk tokens in 2003, CAB evidence shows that many recipients have experienced significant difficulties accessing this vital support.  Citizens Advice fears that these problems will continue with the roll out of Healthy Start, since there are no current plans to change either the system or the administration.

Key points:

Welfare food and healthy start (Adobe Acrobat Document 61kb)