| Literature DB >> 26248959 |
Yang Guo1, Lea Berrang-Ford2,3, James Ford2,4, Marie-Pierre Lardeau2,4, Victoria Edge4,5, Kaitlin Patterson2, Sherilee L Harper4,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Food insecurity is an ongoing problem in the Canadian Arctic. Although most studies have focused on smaller communities, little is known about food insecurity in larger centres.Entities:
Keywords: Indigenous; Inuit; Iqaluit; Nunavut; aboriginal; food security; social determinants of health
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26248959 PMCID: PMC4528079 DOI: 10.3402/ijch.v74.27284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Circumpolar Health ISSN: 1239-9736 Impact factor: 1.228
Fig. 1The Canadian Territory of Nunavut with Iqaluit highlighted.
Variables included in data analysis as potential predictors of food security among Inuit respondents in Iqaluit, Nunavut, in September 2012 and May 2013
| Predictor | Description | Justification | Type | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual-level questions | Age | Age of the person in charge of food preparation | Elderly respondents might be more food secure due to better budget management skills (8) | Categorical |
| Sex | Sex of the person in charge of food preparation | Women are hypothesized to experience higher food insecurity (9, 12) | Categorical/dichotomous | |
| Formal education level | Highest level of formal education attained by the person in charge of food preparation | Higher formal education level has been associated with reduced food insecurity (31) | Categorical/ordinal | |
| Employment status | Current employment status of the person in charge of food preparation | Employment has been associated with reduced food insecurity (8) | Categorical/ordinal | |
| Household-level | Presence of child in household | Presence of a person under the age 18 currently residing in the household | Households with children experience higher food insecurity (5, 31) | Categorical/dichotomous |
| questions | Consumption of country food | Frequency of consumption of country food in the last month of the person who had the most recent birthday | Respondents who regularly consumed country food were less likely to be food insecure (9) | Categorical/ordinal |
| Presence of mould and/or major repairs required | Whether the house had a problem with mould and/or was in need of major repairs | Respondents who live in a house requiring major repairs were more likely to experience food insecurity. Mould was also tested in the model (7) | Categorical/dichotomous | |
| Reliance on income support | Whether any member in the household received income support in the past month (Government of Nunavut income support programme) | Households that rely on income support experience higher food insecurity (7) | Categorical/dichotomous | |
| – | Season | The season during which the respondent was surveyed (September–October or May–June) | Country food availability varies with season in various Indigenous communities (13) | Categorical/dichotomous |
Food security status of Iqaluit, Nunavut, respondents in September 2012 and May 2013a
| September 2012 | May 2013 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Food security status | n | All households | Inuit respondents | Non-Inuit respondents | n | All households | Inuit respondents | Non-Inuit respondents |
| High food security | 286 | 64.1 (59.7–68.6) | 44.9 (38.9–50.9) | 92.8 (89.0–96.6) | 297 | 65.6 (61.2–70.0) | 44.0 (37.9–50.1) | 94.4 (91.2–97.7) |
| Marginal food security | 32 | 7.2 (4.8–9.6) | 10.5 (6.8–14.2) | 2.2 (0–4.4) | 33 | 7.3 (4.9–9.7) | 11.2 (7.4–15.2) | 2.0 (0–4.0) |
| Low food security | 57 | 12.8 (9.7–15.9) | 20.2 (15.4–25.1) | 3.3 (0–6.0) | 51 | 11.3 (8.3–14.2) | 19.1 (14.2–23.9) | 1.6 (0–3.2) |
| Very low food security | 71 | 15.9 (12.5–19.3) | 24.3 (19.2–29.5) | 1.7 (0–3.6) | 72 | 15.9 (12.5–19.3) | 25.7 (20.3–31.1) | 2.0 (0–4.0) |
Values are percentages (95% CI).
Percentages may not add to 100% due to rounding off.
Fig. 2Food security status of respondents based on ethnic origin, in September 2012 and May 2013.
Chi-squared results of predictors of food insecurity, Inuit respondents only, in Iqaluit, Nunavut, September 2012a
| Total | Food secure | Food insecure | Probability (chi-squared) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 264 (100) | 145 (55) | 119 (45) | 0.986 |
| 0–21 years old | 28 (100) | 15 (54) | 13 (46) | |
| 21–40 years old | 103 (100) | 57 (55) | 46 (45) | |
| 41+ years old | 133 (100) | 73 (55) | 60 (45) | |
| Sex | 268 (100) | 148 (55) | 120 (45) | 0.764 |
| Male | 89 (100) | 48 (54) | 41 (46) | |
| Female | 179 (100) | 100 (56) | 79 (44) | |
| Education | 267 (100) | 147 (55) | 120 (45) | <0.01 |
| High school not completed | 168 (100) | 79 (47) | 89 (53) | |
| High school completed | 50 (100) | 28 (56) | 22 (44) | |
| College or above | 49 (100) | 40 (82) | 9 (18) | |
| Employment | 267 (100) | 147 (55) | 120 (45) | <0.01 |
| Full-time | 93 (100) | 71 (76) | 22 (24) | |
| Part-time | 11 (100) | 7 (64) | 4 (36) | |
| Unemployed | 163 (100) | 69 (42) | 94 (58) | |
| Presence of a child (<18 years) in household | 268 (100) | 148 (55) | 120 (45) | 0.898 |
| Yes | 144 (100) | 79 (55) | 65 (45) | |
| No | 124 (100) | 69 (56) | 55 (44) | |
| Country food consumption (meat from land and/or freshly caught fish in half or more of all meals) | 265 (100) | 145 (55) | 120 (45) | 0.872 |
| Yes | 109 (100) | 59 (54) | 50 (46) | |
| No | 156 (100) | 86 (55) | 70 (45) | |
| Poor housing conditions (mould and/or major repairs) | 258 (100) | 142 (55) | 116 (45) | <0.01 |
| Yes | 83 (100) | 28 (34) | 55 (66) | |
| No | 175 (100) | 114 (65) | 61 (35) | |
| Reliance on income support | 266 (100) | 147 (55) | 119 (45) | <0.01 |
| Yes | 95 (100) | 25 (26) | 70 (74) | |
| No | 171 (100) | 122 (71) | 49 (29) | |
| Season | 522 (100) | 286 (55) | 236 (45) | 0.838 |
| September–October | 268 (100) | 148 (55) | 120 (45) | |
| May | 254 (100) | 138 (54) | 116 (46) |
Values are number of respondents (percent).
Chi-squared results of predictors of food insecurity, Inuit respondents only, in Iqaluit, Nunavut, May 2013a
| Total (%) | Food secure (%) | Food insecure (%) | Probability (Chi-squared) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 252 (100) | 136 (54) | 116 (46) | 0.811 |
| 0–20 years old | 34 (100) | 17 (50) | 17 (50) | |
| 21–40 years old | 98 (100) | 55 (56) | 43 (44) | |
| 41+ years old | 120 (100) | 64 (53) | 56 (47) | |
| Sex | 254 (100) | 138 (54) | 116 (46) | 0.925 |
| Male | 89 (100) | 48 (54) | 41 (46) | |
| Female | 165 (100) | 90 (55) | 75 (45) | |
| Education | 254 (100) | 138 (54) | 116 (46) | 0.018 |
| High school not completed | 143 (100) | 67 (47) | 76 (53) | |
| High school completed | 64 (100) | 43 (67) | 21 (33) | |
| College or above | 47 (100) | 28 (60) | 19 (40) | |
| Employment | 254 (100) | 138 (54) | 116 (46) | <0.01 |
| Full-time | 87 (100) | 66 (76) | 21 (24) | |
| Part-time | 16 (100) | 7 (44) | 9 (56) | |
| Unemployed | 151 (100) | 65 (43) | 86 (57) | |
| Presence of a child (<18 years) in household | 254 (100) | 138 (54) | 116 (46) | 0.807 |
| Yes | 149 (100) | 80 (54) | 69 (46) | |
| No | 105 (100) | 58 (55) | 47 (45) | |
| Country food consumption (meat from land and/or freshly caught fish in half or more of all meals) | 252 (100) | 137 (54) | 115 (46) | 0.422 |
| Yes | 81 (100) | 47 (58) | 34 (42) | |
| No | 171 (100) | 90 (53) | 81 (47) | |
| Poor housing conditions (mould and/or major repairs) | 250 (100) | 137 (55) | 113 (45) | <0.01 |
| Yes | 82 (100) | 31 (38) | 51 (62) | |
| No | 168 (100) | 106 (63) | 62 (37) | |
| Reliance on income support | 254 (100) | 138 (54) | 116 (46) | <0.01 |
| Yes | 92 (100) | 26 (28) | 66 (72) | |
| No | 162 (100) | 112 (69) | 50 (31) |
Values are number of respondents (percent).
Logistic regression models results in both seasons (September 2012 and May 2013), Inuit respondents onlya in Iqaluit, Nunavut
| Multivariable Logistic Regression ModelOutcome: Food secure status | Model of best fit |
|---|---|
| Number of observations | 501 |
| Pseudo R2 | 0.18 |
| Age | |
| Respondents age 0–20 | 0.35 |
| Respondents age 21–40 | 0.43 |
| Respondents age 41 and older | ref. |
| Person responsible for food preparation is employed | 2.19 |
| Presence of mould in house/major repairs required | 0.42 |
| Reliance on income support | 0.25 |
| Season | |
| September 2012 | ref. |
| May 2013 | 0.95 (0.64–1.42) |
p < 0.01.
Values are odds ratio (95% CI).
Published prevalence of food insecurity in communities/regions of Canada
| Area of study | Prevalence of food insecurity (%) | Recall period | Survey month | Target population | Survey used | Year of survey | Author(s), year of publication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kugaaruk, Nunavut | 83 (adult) | 12 months | October–November 2011 | Inuit | Modified US FSSM | 2001 | Lawn & Harvey, 2003 (3) |
| Nunavut | 69.6 (household) | 12 months | Summer and fall 2007, 2008 | Inuit | Modified US FSSM | 2007–2008 | Egeland et al., 2010 (5) |
| Nunavut | 68.8 | 12 months | Summer and fall 2007, 2008 | Inuit | Modified US FSSM | 2007–2008 | Rosol et al., 2011 (6) |
| Igloolik, Nunavut | 64 | 12 months | Summer 2007 | Iglulingmiut | Modified US FSSM | 2007 | Ford & Berrang–Ford 2009 (9) |
| 36 communities of the Inuvialuit Settlement Region, Nunavut and Nunatsiavut | 62.6 | 12 months | Summer and fall 2007 and 2008 | Inuit | Modified US FSSM | 2007–2008 | Huet et al., 2012 (7) |
| Inuvialuit Settlement Region | 43.3 | 12 months | Summer and fall 2007, 2008 | Inuit | Modified US FSSM | 2007–2008 | Rosol et al., 2011 (6) |
| Kangiqsujuaq, Nunavik | 40 (adult) | 12 months | May–June 2002 | Inuit | Modified US FSSM | 2002 | Lawn & Harvey, 2004 (19) |
| Iqaluit, Nunavut | 28.7 (September) | 1 month | September–October 2012, May 2013 | Inuit and Non-Inuit | Modified US FSSM | 2012–2013 | This paper |
| Nunavut | 36.2 | 12 months | January 2011 to December 2012 (ongoing) | Population of Nunavut | Modified US FSSM | 2011–2012 | Statistics Canada 2013 (34) |
| Canadian average | 8.3 | 12 months | January 2011 to December 2012 (ongoing) | Canadian Population | Modified US FSSM | 2011–2012 | Statistics Canada 2013 (34) |
Among Inuit only, prevalence is 44.7 and 45.7% in September and May, respectively.
| Food security status level | Score | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| General category | FSSM Category | Code | Households with children (out of 18) | Households without children (out of 10) |
| Food secure | High food security | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Marginal food security | 1 | 1–2 | 1–2 | |
| Food insecure | Low food security | 2 | 3–7 | 3–5 |
| Very low food security | 3 | 8–18 | 6–10 | |
Values are number of affirmative responses.
| FSSM answer | Database coding | Food security coding | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | Yes | 1 | 1 |
| Often | 1 | ||
| Sometimes | 2 | ||
| Almost every day of the month | 1 | ||
| About half the days during the month | 2 | ||
| Negative | Never | 3 | 0 |
| No | 0 | ||
| A few days during the month | 3 |