School of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ottawa, 136 Jean-Jacques-Lussier Pvt, Room VNR5015, Ottawa, ON, K1N 6N5, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Mar 25;22(1):586. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13015-0.
Despite the widespread proliferation of food banks in high-income countries over the past several decades, there is a paucity of data regarding the long-term experiences of the people who rely on food banks. We were unable to find any other studies with follow-up interviews later than 6 months after baseline.
This study examined the changes in the lived experiences of people who accessed food banks over a period of 18 months.
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 11 people who accessed food banks in Ottawa, Canada and who had participated in a 6-month study that ended one full year before this follow-up study was done. Transcripts of the interviews were analyzed through a general inductive approach involving repeated readings and coding of relevant segments of text with NVivo software according to themes that emerged iteratively. Code reports were then used to discuss and reach consensus on a final set of themes.
Three main themes emerged: (1) chronic physical and mental health issues intersecting with food bank access; (2) psychosocial impact of relying on food banks; and (3) living on a low income and dealing with poverty. Chronic physical and mental health conditions were prevalent among the participants. As well, 10 of the 11 participants in this 18-month follow-up continued to rely on food banks as a regular resource - not as an emergency relief measure - to supplement their nutritional needs. While most of the participants reported that food banks helped them in some way, many shortcomings were also noted regarding food amounts, quality and choice. Overall, there was little change reported since the 6-month follow-up.
The shortcomings reported by participants can mostly be attributed to the dependence of food banks on charitable donations; thus, despite the commendable work of food bank staff and volunteers, participants described the food assistance as inadequate. Additionally, long-term food bank usage was a common denominator in the lived experiences of all our participants; therefore, our findings reinforce the need for assistance programs that target long-term food insecurity and its underlying causes, to replace or supplement charity-based food bank programs.
尽管在过去几十年中,高收入国家的食品银行广泛普及,但关于依赖食品银行的人们的长期经历的数据却很少。我们没有找到任何其他在基线后 6 个月以上进行随访访谈的研究。
本研究探讨了在 18 个月的时间内,使用食品银行的人的生活经历发生的变化。
对在加拿大渥太华使用食品银行并参加了一项为期 6 个月的研究的 11 人进行了半结构化访谈,该研究在这项随访研究结束整整一年之前结束。使用 NVivo 软件根据反复阅读和对文本相关部分进行编码所出现的主题,通过一般归纳方法对访谈记录进行分析。然后使用代码报告来讨论并就最终的主题达成共识。
出现了三个主要主题:(1)慢性身体和心理健康问题与食品银行的使用相交织;(2)依靠食品银行的心理社会影响;(3)低收入和贫困的生活。参与者普遍存在慢性身体和心理健康问题。此外,在这项 18 个月的随访中,11 名参与者中的 10 名继续将食品银行作为常规资源(而不是紧急救济措施)来补充其营养需求。虽然大多数参与者表示食品银行在某些方面对他们有所帮助,但也指出了食品数量、质量和选择方面的许多不足之处。总体而言,与 6 个月随访相比,报告的变化很少。
参与者报告的不足之处主要归因于食品银行对慈善捐赠的依赖;因此,尽管食品银行工作人员和志愿者的工作值得称赞,但参与者还是将食品援助描述为不足。此外,长期使用食品银行是我们所有参与者生活经历的共同特征;因此,我们的研究结果强调需要援助计划来解决长期的粮食不安全及其根本原因,以取代或补充基于慈善的食品银行计划。