Applying a Health Access Framework to Understand and Address Food Insecurity
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Food Insecurity through the Lens of Access Barriers
1.2. Limitations of Food Insecurity Measures
1.3. Nonprofit Organizations’ Role in Addressing Social Needs including Food Insecurity
2. Methods
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
6. Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Predisposing Access Barriers | Enabling Access Barriers | |
---|---|---|
Societal-Level | Inequality in education and occupation, Informational barriers (lack of understanding about the need for specific resources) | Inequality in income, healthcare, and housing |
Institutional-Level | Attitudes towards food providers (e.g., food pantries, soup kitchens) | Food prices, Eligibility and application process of federal nutrition assistance programs, Geographic barriers (lack of access to supermarkets, and food providers, transportation barriers), Food policies, Poor communications about available food resources |
Individual-Level | Stigma, Beliefs, Informational barriers (lack of information about resources), healthcare comorbidities | Economic instability (income), Social relationships |
Loop | Name—Explanation |
---|---|
R1 | Health loop: the causal link between FI and negative health outcomes such as obesity, depression, violence, etc. creates a reinforcing loop that increases FI and negative health outcomes |
R2 | Family Structure loop: FI creates stress, disorganizes households, and impacts family cohesion which reinforces FI. |
R3 | Unhealthy Food loop: Lack of income cause transportation barriers, which force people to acquire food from convenience stores with mostly unhealthy foods, and eventually lead to higher FI rates. Many other factors can also cause transportation barriers but we just illustrated the link between income, transportation, and FI in this loop. Additionally, economic instability impacts health and housing but the links are not shown. |
B1 | Federal Nutrition Assistance Programs loop: increasing efforts to address FI could include supporting nonprofit organizations to connect people to federal nutrition assistance programs or enhancing these programs’ capabilities in which both will provide critical benefits to low-income people to meet their food needs |
B2 | Food Providers loop: as the efforts to address FI increase, more nonprofit organizations assist food providers and will raise public awareness about these providers which will eventually raise access to food. |
B3 | Balancing transportation loop: some nonprofit organizations assist people to get access to free transportation, hencepeople could shop from supermarkets that are far from their neighborhood, which will decrease FI. |
B4 | Housing loop: nonprofit organizations can connect people to emergency housing resources, assisting people to overcome their housing problems, so that people will not need to choose between housing and food. |
B5 | Primary Care loop: addressing healthcare issues provide the chance to people to better perform their job duties, improve their economic stability, choose better food, andmeet their food needs. |
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Sharareh, N.; Wallace, A.S. Applying a Health Access Framework to Understand and Address Food Insecurity. Healthcare 2022, 10, 380. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10020380
Sharareh N, Wallace AS. Applying a Health Access Framework to Understand and Address Food Insecurity. Healthcare. 2022; 10(2):380. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10020380
Chicago/Turabian StyleSharareh, Nasser, and Andrea S. Wallace. 2022. "Applying a Health Access Framework to Understand and Address Food Insecurity" Healthcare 10, no. 2: 380. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10020380