Health Systems Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa.
Southern African Social Policy Research Institute Cape Town, South Africa.
Glob Health Action. 2022 Dec 31;15(1):2014045. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2021.2014045.
Despite South Africa being an upper middle-income country producing enough food to sustain its population, and having an advanced social welfare system, it has high levels of food insecurity at the household-level. Food insecurity is linked to malnutrition and undernutrition in children. This manuscript addresses gaps in knowledge about food choices and practices of primary caregivers of children in receipt of South Africa's largest cash transfer programme, the Child Support Grant (CSG).
The main objective of the study was to explore CSG caregivers' foodways and the choices they made about what food to buy, where to buy it and for what reasons, in Langa in the Western Cape and Mt Frere in the Eastern Cape.
We conducted a total of 40 in-depth interviews and 5 focus group discussions with primary caregivers of Child Support Grant recipients younger than 5 years in the Eastern and Western Cape provinces.
Caregivers' food choices were less influenced by cultural practices and personal preferences, than by financial and physical constraints in terms of what and where to access food. Constraints in food choices were chiefly a consequence of the small amount of the grant, as well as a food environment that only availed foods of a certain quality and type in these low-income communities.
The foodways of recipients of social assistance can only be better aligned with nutrition messaging and policy if there are changes in the monetary value of cash transfers, and the food environments of low-income households which determine access to, availability and affordability of nutritious food. Local informal food enterprises play an important role in the food system of CSG recipients and need to be considered in any strategies that seek to reform the food system of low-income communities in South Africa and similar settings.
尽管南非是一个中等偏上收入国家,能够生产足够的食物来养活其人口,并拥有先进的社会福利制度,但它在家庭层面上仍存在高度的粮食不安全问题。粮食不安全与儿童营养不良和营养不足有关。本文主要探讨了在接受南非最大现金转移支付计划——儿童抚养补助金(CSG)的家庭中,主要照顾者的食物选择和行为方面的知识空白。
本研究的主要目的是探讨西开普省兰加和东开普省姆弗勒里的 CSG 照顾者的食物方式,以及他们在购买什么食物、在哪里购买以及出于什么原因购买食物方面的选择。
我们在西开普省和东开普省对 5 岁以下 CSG 受助人的主要照顾者进行了总共 40 次深入访谈和 5 次焦点小组讨论。
照顾者的食物选择较少受到文化习俗和个人偏好的影响,而更多地受到经济和物质方面的限制,包括获取食物的种类和地点。食物选择的限制主要是由于补助金数额较少,以及这些低收入社区的食物环境只能提供一定质量和类型的食物。
如果要改变现金转移支付的货币价值,以及决定低收入家庭获得、供应和负担营养食品能力的食物环境,那么只有改变社会援助接受者的食物方式,才能更好地将其与营养信息和政策保持一致。当地非正式的食品企业在 CSG 接受者的食品系统中发挥着重要作用,因此在任何试图改革南非和类似环境中低收入社区食品系统的战略中,都需要考虑这些企业。