Coping Behaviours and the concept of Time Poverty: a review of perceived social and health outcomes of food insecurity on women and children

被引:0
|
作者
Sriroop Chaudhuri
Mimi Roy
Louis M. McDonald
Yves Emendack
机构
[1] O.P. Jindal Global University,Center for Environment, Sustainability and Human Development, Jindal School of Liberal Arts and Humanities
[2] O.P. Jindal Global University,Jindal School of Liberal Arts and Humanities
[3] West Virginia University,Davis College of Agriculture, natural resources and Design
[4] USDA-ARS,undefined
来源
Food Security | 2021年 / 13卷
关键词
Food insecurity; Coping behaviour; Nutritional switch; Livelihood alteration; Farm women; Women’s time poverty; Gender discrimination; Mental health; Child labour; School drop-out; Coping strategy index (CSI); Sustainable development;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Mounting concerns over food insecurity have emerged as a key agenda in many recent global development dialogues, on accounts of observed and expected health outcomes. The present study attempts a reflective summary around a yet little-explored aspect of food insecurity: health and social ramifications of coping behaviours (adaptive strategies to improve food availability, accessibility, utilisation, and stability), with specific emphasis on women and children. We conducted a systematic literature with different search engines and databases to identify a diversity of recent journal articles, reports, working papers, white papers, proceedings, dissertations, newspaper articles, book chapters, and grey literature, published in the post-2000s period. We thus identified two broad generic categories in the relevant global literature: coping behaviours that are (a) non-food (livelihood alterations) and (2) food-based. For women, the former includes outdoor employment, selling asset bases, borrowing food and/or money, and purchasing food on credit. Food-based coping strategies included reduced daily meal portion sizes and reducing the frequency of food uptake or skipping meals altogether (i.e., Food Rationing); nutritional switch (i.e., Food Stretching); and Food Sharing. Coping behaviours involving children primarily include dropping out of school, begging, stealing, and Food Seeking (i.e., eating outside home, with relatives or friends, or at charitable institutions). The likely health outcomes included stunting and wasting, disrupted socio-cognitive development among children. A subsidiary idea to conduct this study was to offer the concerned authorities an insight into the breadth of coping behaviours, so as to help them anticipate targeted and gender-responsive interventions on a priori basis. We offer a discourse on what we refer to as time poverty, especially for farm women, resulting from obligatory outdoor employment, mostly as farm labourers to highlight a social paradox: women provide massive contributions in the translation of high value goods and services of a vibrant global agricultural system, and yet are among the first victims of food insecurity themselves. This situation contradicts a number of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and aggravates gender disparity. In final section we appeal for more targeted, evidence-based research to establish direct causal linkages between food insecurity and coping behaviours, distinguishing them from life-as-usual scenarios. To that end, we present a brief critique on Coping Strategy Index (CSI) –a widely used tool to evaluate severity of coping behaviours.
引用
收藏
页码:1049 / 1068
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Food insecurity and mental health outcomes among homeless adults: a scoping review
    Loftus, Elizabeth, I
    Lachaud, James
    Hwang, Stephen W.
    Mejia-Lancheros, Cilia
    PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION, 2021, 24 (07) : 1766 - 1777
  • [22] Food Insecurity in College Students The Role of Environment, Social Networks, and Perceived Food-Related Time, Stress, and Skill
    Castellanos, Diana Cuy
    Holcomb, Jeanne
    TOPICS IN CLINICAL NUTRITION, 2024, 39 (01) : 13 - 24
  • [23] The influence of poverty and social support on the perceived health of children born to minority migrant mothers
    Van Hulst, Andraea
    Seguin, Louise
    Zunzunegui, Maria-Victoria
    Velez, Maria P.
    Nikiema, Beatrice
    ETHNICITY & HEALTH, 2011, 16 (03) : 185 - 200
  • [24] Association of Food Insecurity with Children's Behavioral, Emotional, and Academic Outcomes: A Systematic Review
    Shankar, Priya
    Chung, Rainjade
    Frank, Deborah A.
    JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL AND BEHAVIORAL PEDIATRICS, 2017, 38 (02): : 135 - 150
  • [25] Time-Varying Associations between Food Insecurity and Infant and Maternal Health Outcomes
    Orr, Colin J.
    Ritter, Victor
    Coker, Tumaini R.
    Perrin, Eliana M.
    Flower, Kori B.
    JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, 2022, 152 (05): : 1291 - 1297
  • [26] The Mental Health Outcomes of Food Insecurity and Insufficiency in West Africa: A Systematic Narrative Review
    Ae-Ngibise, Kenneth Ayuurebobi
    Asare-Doku, Winifred
    Peprah, Jennifer
    Mujtaba, Mohammed Nuhu
    Nifasha, Diane
    Donnir, Gordon Maanianu
    BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, 2021, 11 (11)
  • [27] Food Insecurity and Other Poverty Indicators Among People Living with HIV/AIDS: Effects on Treatment and Health Outcomes
    Seth C. Kalichman
    Dominica Hernandez
    Chauncey Cherry
    Moira O. Kalichman
    Christopher Washington
    Tamar Grebler
    Journal of Community Health, 2014, 39 : 1133 - 1139
  • [28] Food Insecurity and Other Poverty Indicators Among People Living with HIV/AIDS: Effects on Treatment and Health Outcomes
    Kalichman, Seth C.
    Hernandez, Dominica
    Cherry, Chauncey
    Kalichman, Moira O.
    Washington, Christopher
    Grebler, Tamar
    JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY HEALTH, 2014, 39 (06) : 1133 - 1139
  • [29] Impact of Health and Social Factors on the Cardiometabolic Risk in People with Food Insecurity: A Systematic Review
    Salinas-Roca, Blanca
    Rubio-Pique, Laura
    Carrillo-Alvarez, Elena
    Franco-Alcaine, Gemma
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 19 (21)
  • [30] Social capital, food insecurity, and health outcomes in the US during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Choi, Y.
    Kim, H. H.
    PERSPECTIVES IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2024, 144 (01) : 39 - 51