Section 123290 Of Article 2. Women, Infants, And Children’s Nutrition From California Health And Safety Code >> Division 106. >> Part 2. >> Chapter 1. >> Article 2.
123290
. The department, under any program established pursuant to
this article, shall do all of the following:
(a) Establish guidelines to determine resource allocation giving
consideration to an area's nutritional need.
(b) Designate the counties within which a program will be
conducted, with the approval of those counties.
(c) Establish the minimum nutritional requirements for recipients.
(d) Designate specific supplemental foods to meet the minimum
nutritional requirements for recipients.
(e) Develop and maintain a system for the delivery of supplemental
foods to recipients through the distribution of supplemental foods
designated in subdivision (d) and nutrition coupons when other
methods of delivery are impractical.
(f) (1) Develop and coordinate a smoking cessation component of
program operations, with consideration of local agency plans, needs,
and available tobacco education resources.
(2) In consultation with the directors of local agencies and with
other individuals with expertise in the field of smoking cessation,
identify and promulgate a strategy for smoking cessation in the state
plan of operation and administration of the WIC program, including,
but not limited to all of the following:
(A) Designating an agency staff member to coordinate smoking
cessation efforts.
(B) Providing training on smoking cessation and tobacco education
to designated staff members of local agencies who are responsible for
counseling participants in the program.
(3) Develop and implement procedures to ensure that tobacco use
screening and education, including, but not limited to, smoking
cessation counseling and referrals where appropriate, are offered to
all participants.
(g) (1) Establish guidelines and criteria to be used by
participating local agencies, when determining recipient eligibility,
that require, in addition to a recipient being a low-income pregnant
woman, or a low-income postpartum and lactating woman, or a
low-income infant or child under five years of age, that the
recipient be at nutritional risk.
(2) A health professional on the staff of the local agency shall
determine if a person is at nutritional risk through a medical or
nutritional assessment. This determination may be based on referral
data submitted by a health professional not on the staff of the local
agency. The person's height or length and weight shall be measured,
and a hematological test for anemia, such as a hemoglobin or
hematocrit test, shall be performed. However, the tests shall not be
required for infants under six months of age. In addition, the blood
test shall not be required for children who were determined to be
within the normal range at their last program certification. However,
the blood test shall be performed on the children at least once a
year. A breastfeeding woman may be certified if the child she is
breastfeeding is determined to be at nutritional risk and the woman
meets the income eligibility criteria.
(h) Operate the program as an adjunct to existing health services.
(i) Seek federal funds to carry out this article.