Dachner Naomi, Gaetz Stephen, Poland Blake, Tarasuk Valerie
Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2009 Aug;20(3):846-53. doi: 10.1353/hpu.0.0167.
Over the past two decades, Canada has witnessed a proliferation of community-based initiatives providing charitable meals to homeless and under-housed individuals. The existing research has raised concerns about the ability of such initiatives to meet users' nutrient needs. As part of a study of Toronto meal programs, open-ended interviews with program coordinators and observations of 16 meal programs were conducted to provide insight into the nutritional vulnerability of program users. Analysis using ethnographic methods revealed that, although charitable meal programs began in response to concerns about unmet food needs, the planning and delivery of meals are disconnected from the dietary needs of program users. Food was often a secondary service, designed to fit within the existing operations, resources, and mandate of the host agency. This work adds to calls for a rethinking of current responses to problems of hunger and food insecurity among individuals living in poverty in Canada.
在过去二十年里,加拿大见证了众多社区倡议活动的涌现,这些活动为无家可归者和住房不足者提供慈善餐食。现有研究对这类倡议活动满足使用者营养需求的能力提出了担忧。作为对多伦多餐食项目研究的一部分,我们对项目协调员进行了开放式访谈,并观察了16个餐食项目,以深入了解项目使用者的营养脆弱性。采用人种志方法进行的分析表明,尽管慈善餐食项目最初是为应对未得到满足的食物需求而启动的,但餐食的规划和提供与项目使用者的饮食需求脱节。食物往往是一项次要服务,旨在适应主办机构现有的运营、资源和任务规定。这项工作进一步呼吁重新思考加拿大目前针对贫困人群饥饿和粮食不安全问题的应对措施。