Kimani-Murage E W, Schofield L, Wekesah F, Mohamed S, Mberu B, Ettarh R, Egondi T, Kyobutungi C, Ezeh A
African Population and Health Research Centre, Nairobi, Kenya, P.O. Box 10787, 00100, Nairobi, Kenya,
J Urban Health. 2014 Dec;91(6):1098-113. doi: 10.1007/s11524-014-9894-3.
Food and nutrition security is critical for economic development due to the role of nutrition in healthy growth and human capital development. Slum residents, already grossly affected by chronic poverty, are highly vulnerable to different forms of shocks, including those arising from political instability. This study describes the food security situation among slum residents in Nairobi, with specific focus on vulnerability associated with the 2007/2008 postelection crisis in Kenya. The study from which the data is drawn was nested within the Nairobi Urban Health and Demographic Surveillance System (NUHDSS), which follows about 70,000 individuals from close to 30,000 households in two slums in Nairobi, Kenya. The study triangulates data from qualitative and quantitative sources. It uses qualitative data from 10 focus group discussions with community members and 12 key-informant interviews with community opinion leaders conducted in November 2010, and quantitative data involving about 3,000 households randomly sampled from the NUHDSS database in three rounds of data collection between March 2011 and January 2012. Food security was defined using the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (HFIAS) criteria. The study found high prevalence of food insecurity; 85% of the households were food insecure, with 50% being severely food insecure. Factors associated with food security include level of income, source of livelihood, household size, dependence ratio; illness, perceived insecurity and slum of residence. The qualitative narratives highlighted household vulnerability to food insecurity as commonplace but critical during times of crisis. Respondents indicated that residents in the slums generally eat for bare survival, with little concern for quality. The narratives described heightened vulnerability during the 2007/2008 postelection violence in Kenya in the perception of slum residents. Prices of staple foods like maize flour doubled and simultaneously household purchasing power was eroded due to worsened unemployment situation. The use of negative coping strategies to address food insecurity such as reducing the number of meals, reducing food variety and quality, scavenging, and eating street foods was prevalent. In conclusion, this study describes the deeply intertwined nature of chronic poverty and acute crisis, and the subsequent high levels of food insecurity in urban slum settings. Households are extremely vulnerable to food insecurity; the situation worsening during periods of crisis in the perception of slum residents, engendering frequent use of negative coping strategies. Effective response to addressing vulnerability to household food insecurity among the urban poor should focus on both the underlying vulnerabilities of households due to chronic poverty and added impacts of acute crises.
由于营养在健康成长和人力资本发展中所起的作用,粮食和营养安全对经济发展至关重要。贫民窟居民已经深受长期贫困的严重影响,极易受到各种形式冲击的影响,包括因政治不稳定而产生的冲击。本研究描述了内罗毕贫民窟居民的粮食安全状况,特别关注与2007/2008年肯尼亚选举后危机相关的脆弱性。本研究的数据来源于内罗毕城市健康与人口监测系统(NUHDSS),该系统跟踪肯尼亚内罗毕两个贫民窟中近30000户家庭的约70000个人。该研究对定性和定量来源的数据进行了三角测量。它使用了2010年11月与社区成员进行的10次焦点小组讨论以及与社区意见领袖进行的12次关键 informant访谈的定性数据,以及在2011年3月至2012年1月三轮数据收集期间从NUHDSS数据库中随机抽取的约3000户家庭的定量数据。粮食安全是根据家庭粮食不安全获取量表(HFIAS)标准来定义的。该研究发现粮食不安全的发生率很高;85%的家庭粮食不安全,其中50%严重粮食不安全。与粮食安全相关的因素包括收入水平、生计来源、家庭规模、抚养比、疾病、感知到的不安全和居住的贫民窟。定性叙述强调家庭在粮食不安全方面的脆弱性很常见,但在危机时期至关重要。受访者表示,贫民窟居民通常只是为了生存而吃饭,很少关心质量。这些叙述描述了在肯尼亚2007/2008年选举后暴力事件期间,贫民窟居民认为脆弱性加剧。玉米粉等主食价格翻了一番,同时由于失业情况恶化,家庭购买力受到侵蚀。为应对粮食不安全而采用减少用餐次数、减少食物种类和质量、捡破烂和吃街头食品等消极应对策略的情况很普遍。总之,本研究描述了长期贫困与急性危机之间紧密交织的性质,以及城市贫民窟环境中随后出现的高度粮食不安全状况。家庭极易受到粮食不安全的影响;在贫民窟居民看来,这种情况在危机时期会恶化,导致频繁使用消极应对策略。应对城市贫困人口家庭粮食不安全脆弱性的有效措施应既关注家庭因长期贫困而存在的潜在脆弱性,也关注急性危机带来的额外影响。