| Literature DB >> 25432209 |
Valerie Tarasuk1, Naomi Dachner, Anne-Marie Hamelin, Aleck Ostry, Patricia Williams, Elietha Bosckei, Blake Poland, Kim Raine.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Food banks have emerged in response to growing food insecurity among low-income groups in many affluent nations, but their ability to manage this problem is questionable. In Canada, in the absence of public programs and policy interventions, food banks are the only source of immediate assistance for households struggling to meet food needs, but there are many indications that this response is insufficient. The purpose of this study was to examine the factors that facilitate and limit food bank operations in five Canadian cities and appraise the potential of these initiatives to meet food needs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25432209 PMCID: PMC4289166 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-1234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Population, food insecurity prevalence, and scale of food assistance provisioning by city
| Victoria | Edmonton | Toronto | Quebec City | Halifax | All | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Populationa | 358,054 | 1,176,307 | 5,741,419 | 754,358 | 403,188 | |
| Prevalence of food insecurityb | 14.0% | 13.1% | 12.5% | 9.0% | 19.9% | |
| Number of agencies providing food assistance | 29 | 68 | 122 | 90 | 31 | 340 |
| Number of people working (ratio of paid staff to volunteers) | 218 | 479.5 | 1570.5 | 580 | 242.5 | 3090.5 |
| (1 : 2.5) | (1 : 4.2) | (1 : 6.4) | (1 : 6.3) | (1 : 4.6) | (1 : 5.3) | |
| Number of people receiving food assistance in one month | 12882 | 16064 | 90141 | 11143 | 7111 | 137340 |
| Median number served per month by an agency (minimum, maximum) | 20 | 120 | 266 | 56 | 120 | 120 |
| (1, 7000) | (2.5, 2450) | (1, 11700) | (2, 1700) | (17, 2100) | (1, 11700) | |
| Agencies supplied by centralized distributor, n (%) | 8 | 47 | 78 | 53 | 27 | 213 |
| (27.6%) | (69.1%) | (63.9%) | (58.9%) | (87.1%) | (62.7%) | |
| Proportion of assistance delivered by agencies supplied by a centralized distributor | 73.4% | 87.3% | 77.0% | 87.8% | 94.4% | 79.6% |
aStatistics Canada, 2010 [69].
bPrevalence of marginal, moderate, or severe household food insecurity in 2011-12 for corresponding Census Metropolitan Area [8]. This geographic unit includes, but extends beyond the city.
Figure 1The initiation of food assistance programs in five cities.
Selected characteristics of major food donation distributors in each city
| Victoria | Edmonton | Toronto | Quebec City | Halifax | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | Mustard Seed | Edmonton Food Bank | Daily Bread Food Bank | Moisson Quebec | Feed Nova Scotia |
| Year began | 1975/1985b | 1981c | 1983 | 1987 | 1984 |
| Origins & Purpose | Christian charity rooted in Baptist church, to fight hunger and restore faith | Edmonton gleaners association, to reconcile waste with hunger | Sisters of St. Joseph (Catholic Order) and others concerned about impact of growing poverty, to fight to end hunger in Toronto communities | Founder André Mignault, to reduce waste and optimize food aid, and provide alternatives to food banks for people living in poverty | Originally Metro Food Bank Society established by faith and corporate communities to provide emergency food relief in Halifax/Dartmouth; now serving the entire province of Nova Scotia. |
| Services | The largest food bank on Vancouver island assisting 7,000 people/ month; They operate a food hamper delivery program for 10 individuals, a week day drop in with clothing bank and home starter kits, a family centre offering 2 family dinners each month, budgeting, cooking, literacy and parenting support and help to access city services; They also run a church and a faith-based residential recovery program | Their main service is food recovery and distribution of donated food to ~200 agencies; They have an onsite food bank and conduct centralized telephone intake directing clients to one of 40 food depots for pick up, They also provide referrals to food buying co-ops, bread runs, gardens, kitchen, and inexpensive grocers | They operate 2 food banks; collect and distribute food to ~200 member agencies and provide operational support/ guidelines; offer training programs for food bank recipients (food service and catering) and drop-in and shelter volunteers and cooks; they partner in the operation of a community garden; run a referral and information centre; and conduct research to inform practice and advocacy | They collect and distribute food to 140 organizations; provide operational support to agencies wishing to start “food security projects/ alternative practices” including collective kitchens, community gardens, food buying groups; and conduct workshops for food bank workers and recipients. | They collect and distribute donated food to 150 member agencies in communities across Nova Scotia (food banks, meal programs, soup kitchens, school programs and shelters); operate a telephone help line to deal with distress and to inform about nearest food assistance; They also run a culinary training/ employment program; and collect data for advocacy purposes |
Mustard Seed: http://mustardseed.ca/, Edmonton Food Bank: http://edmontonsfoodbank.com/, Daily Bread Food Bank: http://www.dailybread.ca/, Moisson Quebec: http://www.moissonquebec.com/, Feed Nova Scotia: http://www.feednovascotia.ca/. Mustard Seed began as a small church-based mission in 1975 but expanded and moved to a larger site in 1985. The Edmonton Food Bank was the first official food bank in Canada.
Limitations in the delivery of food assistance, by city
| Victoria | Edmonton | Toronto | Quebec City | Halifax | All | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Clients need more food than food bank is able to provide. | 17 (58.6) | 45 (66.2) | 95 (77.9) | 61 (67.8) | 26 (83.9) | 244 (71.8) |
| Agency would expand food program if more resources were available | 17 (58.6) | 33 (48.5) | 91 (74.6) | 50 (55.6) | 22 (71.0) | 213 (62.7) |
| Agency sometimes altered the variety of food provided due to lack of food | 11 (37.9) | 23 (33.8) | 76 (62.3) | 43 (47.8) | 15 (48.4) | 168 (49.4) |
| Agency sometimes cut the size of the hampers provided because of insufficient food | 2 (6.9) | 16 (23.5) | 64 (52.5) | 43 (47.8) | 15 (48.4) | 140 (41.2) |
| Agency sometimes took additional measures to restrict accessa | 4 (13.8) | 10 (14.7) | 43 (35.3) | 28 (31.1) | 8 (25.8) | 93 (27.4) |
aThe additional measures assessed included prioritizing who to serve, reducing the hours of service, and turning people away because the agency had insufficient food to meet demands.
Odds of an agency having to curtail food bank operations in relation to selected food bank characteristics
| Reduce variety of food given | Reduce amount of food given | Restrict access to assistance | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| OR (95% CI)a | 1.34 (1.14, 1.57) | 1.27 (1.09, 1.47) | 1.16 (1.002, 1.33) |
| AOR (95% CI)b | 1.31 (1.10, 1.55) | 1.24 (1.04, 1.46) | 1.14 (0.98, 1.34) |
|
| |||
| OR (95% CI) | 2.14 (1.08, 4.26) | 3.33 (1.45, 7.65) | 1.74 (0.97, 3.13) |
| AOR (95% CI) | 1.88 (0.89, 4.03) | 3.14 (1.31, 7.53) | 1.65 (0.89, 3.05) |
|
| |||
| OR (95% CI) | 1.02 (0.67, 1.57) | 1.45 (1.27, 1.65) | 1.45 (1.04, 2.02) |
| AOR (95% CI) | 1.16 (0.74, 1.82) | 1.71 (1.40, 2.10) | 1.56 (1.06, 2.29) |
aOdds ratios and 95% confidence intervals have been derived from logistic regression analyses.
bAdjusted odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals have been derived from a single multivariate logistic regression including a continuous variable for the log-transformed number of people served and binary variables to denote food banks serving more often than once per month and those reporting that their schedules have been developed taking into account the times when food is most needed by their clientele.