| Literature DB >> 22720722 |
James Ford1, Marie-Pierre Lardeau, Will Vanderbilt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Community food programs (CFPs), including soup kitchens and food banks, are a recent development in larger settlements in the Canadian Arctic. Our understanding of utilization of these programs is limited as food systems research has not studied the marginalised and transient populations using CFPs, constraining service planning for some of the most vulnerable community members. This paper reports on a baseline study conducted with users of CFPs in Iqaluit, Nunavut, to identify and characterize utilization and document their food security experience.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22720722 PMCID: PMC3489579 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-464
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Socio-economic demographic data for Iqaluit, based on the 2006 Census
| -Male | 53 (56) | 3175 (51) |
| -Female | 41 (44) | 3010 (49) |
| Reporting Inuit identity | 91 (97) | 3540 (58) |
| Age Group | | |
| -18-24 yrs old | 13 (14) | 530 (9) |
| -25-34 yrs old | 23 (25) | 1215 (20) |
| -35-44 yrs old | 26 (28) | 1075 (17) |
| -45-54 yrs old | 23 (25) | 780 (13) |
| -55-64 yrs old | 7 (7) | 400 (6) |
| over 65 yrs old | 2 (2) | 135 (2) |
| Unemployment rate population over 15 yrs old | 67 (72) | 275 (8) |
| Source of income (all family types)2 | | |
| - | 26% | |
| - | 61% | |
| - | 13% | |
| Education (for population 15 yrs and over) | | |
| -No certificate, diploma or degree | 82 (87) | 1615 (36) |
| -High school certificate or equivalent | 3 (3) | 775 (17) |
| -Higher education (trades, apprenticeship, college, university) | 8 (9) | 2140 (47) |
1 Nunavut Bureau of Statistics. Census Data 2006. http://www.eia.gov.nu.ca/stats/census.html.
Accessed 12 September 2010.
2 Statistics Canada. Community Profiles 2006. http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-recensement/2006. Accessed 12 September 2010.
Figure 1Number of household units visiting the food bank per month from 2007 to 2009. Note: Household unit refers to any type of family: single individual, homeless, family living on their own. In 2007, the food bank operated over 7 months and had 18 delivery days. In 2008, the food bank operated over 12 months and had 28 delivery days. In 2009, the food bank operated over 9 months and had 13 delivery days. In 2007 and 2009, the Food Bank was closed during the summer months.
Key areas explored in the surveys and open-ended questions
| - Socio-demographic information: | - Perception of services: |
| - Access to country foods: | - Challenges to be food secure: |
| - Food security and coping strategies: | - What are the most difficult times during the month, during the year? What makes those times more difficult to have enough food? |
| - Frequency of use of services: | - How can the services be improved? |
Figure 2Average number of adults and children attending the soup kitchen for lunch on a monthly basis. Peak attendance at the soup occurred in 2005 (43 clients per day), when the soup kitchen was serving lunch and supper seven days a week. In recent years the soup kitchen’s operation reduced to serving one meal per day (lunch), five days a week. In 2009, it served meals to an average of 36 people per day.