School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, T201-2211 Westbrook Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 2B5, Canada.
Faculty of Land and Food Systems, Food Nutrition and Health, University of British Columbia, 2205 East Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Sep 5;23(1):1723. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-16602-x.
Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, nearly one in five adults in Canada worried about having enough food to meet their household's needs. Relatedly, throughout the pandemic, public messaging repeatedly urged Canadians to support food charities, including food banks. Yet few studies have examined food bank usage during the pandemic or whether food charities were widely used by Canadians worried about food access.
This study draws on four rounds of nationally representative surveying conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic between May 2020 and December 2021 among adults 18 years and older living in Canada. Descriptive statistics were used to examine rates of food-related worry during all four survey rounds. Data from the fourth survey round, collected in December 2021, were used to explore use of food-based community programs since the onset of the pandemic, including food banks. Logistic regression analyses were used to examine differences in socio-demographic and health-related characteristics between adults who did and did not report accessing food banks before and after adjusting for household income.
Across survey rounds (n = 12,091), more than one in seven participants reported stress or worry related to having enough food to meet their household's basic needs in the previous two weeks. Yet, by December 2021, fewer than 4% of participants reported ever accessing a food bank during the pandemic. Younger age, living with a child, financial concerns due to the pandemic, two different measures of food worry, pre-existing mental health conditions, disability, LGBT2Q + identity, and racialized or Indigenous identity, were each statistically significantly associated with higher odds of using food banks even when controlling for household income.
Despite persistently high rates of food-related worry in 2020 and 2021 in Canada, relatively few adults reported accessing food banks or other charity-based community food programs. While respondents facing social, financial, and health-related inequities and reporting food worry were more likely to use food banks, most respondents did not report food bank use, regardless of financial or demographic circumstances or experiences of food worry. Findings align with previous research indicating that more adequate and comprehensive supports are needed to alleviate food-related-worry in Canada.
在 COVID-19 大流行早期,加拿大近五分之一的成年人担心家庭的食物供应不足。相关地,在整个大流行期间,公共信息多次敦促加拿大人支持食品慈善机构,包括食品银行。然而,很少有研究调查大流行期间食品银行的使用情况,或者担心获得食物的加拿大人是否广泛使用食品慈善机构。
本研究利用了 2020 年 5 月至 2021 年 12 月期间在加拿大进行的四轮全国代表性调查,调查对象为 18 岁及以上的成年人。使用描述性统计数据来检查所有四轮调查中与食物相关的担忧率。利用 2021 年 12 月收集的第四轮调查数据,探讨了自大流行开始以来食品社区计划的使用情况,包括食品银行。使用逻辑回归分析来检查在调整家庭收入前后,报告在大流行期间使用食品银行的成年人与未使用食品银行的成年人在社会人口统计学和健康相关特征方面的差异。
在各轮调查中(n=12091),超过七分之一的参与者报告在前两周内感到压力或担心食物不足以满足家庭的基本需求。然而,到 2021 年 12 月,不到 4%的参与者报告在大流行期间曾使用过食品银行。年龄较小、与儿童同住、因大流行而产生的财务问题、两种不同的食物担忧测量、先前存在的心理健康状况、残疾、LGBT2Q+身份、以及种族化或原住民身份,即使在控制家庭收入的情况下,也与使用食品银行的可能性更高相关。
尽管 2020 年和 2021 年加拿大持续存在与食物相关的担忧,但相对较少的成年人报告使用食品银行或其他基于慈善的社区食品计划。尽管面临社会、财务和健康相关不平等以及报告食物担忧的受访者更有可能使用食品银行,但大多数受访者无论财务或人口统计情况如何,也无论是否经历过食物担忧,都没有报告使用食品银行。研究结果与之前的研究一致,表明需要更充分和全面的支持来缓解加拿大的食物相关担忧。