Perspectives of Food Insecurity and Service Delivery amongst Emergency Food Relief Clients in a Regional City in Victoria, Australia

Author:

Kleve Sue1ORCID,Greenslade Deborah2,Farrington Melissa2,Funston Sarah13,David Benjamin S.1,Xi Jessica1,Swiney Chloe1,Clarke Emily1,Pollard Christina M.4ORCID,Booth Sue5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food, School of Clinical Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Vic 3168, Australia

2. Ballarat Community Health Service, 12 Lilburne St, Victoria 3350, Australia

3. Arnhem Land Progress Aboriginal Corporation, 70 O’Sullivan Circuit, East Arm, NT 0822P: GPO Box 3825, Darwin NT 0801, Australia

4. Population Health, Curtin University, Kent Street, Bentley, WA 6120, Australia

5. College of Medicine & Public Health, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA, Australia

Abstract

This cross-sectional study examined the experiences of people accessing Emergency Food Relief (EFR) in the regional city of Ballarat, Victoria, Australia, including determinants, impacts of food insecurity, and service delivery recommendations. The forty-one item survey examined demographics, food security status (six-item adult US-Household Food Security Survey Module), food acquisition, use of charitable food services, and self-rated health. Adults n = 100 accessing meal programs and/or EFR services from three EFR organisations in 2018 were surveyed. Ninety-seven percent of participants received government social security payments. Food insecurity prevalence was 92% (USDA-HFSSM 6 item); of these, 63% were experiencing very low food security. Over half (54%) of households with children (n = 26) reported being sometimes unable to feed their children balanced meals and 50% indicated that they were not eating enough. Participants (47%) relied on EFR services for food between one and five years. Poor self-rated dental health was expressed by over 50% of participants and 97% indicated the importance for services to provide healthy food. Food insecurity prevalence was high and chronic among adults receiving EFR services in a large regional Australian city. Recipients’ poor dental health, chronicity of use of services for food assistance, and calls for healthier food suggest more was needed to secure pathways out of food insecurity. The chronicity of reliance on EFR is a concern. The results of this study are likely to be of interest to providers and funders of EFR, policy makers, academics, and client advocates. Whilst the provision of EFR is not a sustainable solution to the problem of food insecurity, scope exists to improve service delivery to uphold principles of dignity, choice, and access to nutritious food. Furthermore, this highlights that the key strategies to mitigate food insecurity lie beyond simply feeding people.

Funder

Ballarat Emergency Food Relief

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference45 articles.

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