| Literature DB >> 30597936 |
Timothy J Landrigan1, Deborah A Kerr2, Satvinder S Dhaliwal3, Christina M Pollard4.
Abstract
Food stress, a similar concept to housing stress, occurs when a household needs to spend more than 25% of their disposable income on food. Households at risk of food stress are vulnerable to food insecurity as a result of inadequate income. A Food Stress Index (FSI) identifies at-risk households, in a particular geographic area, using a range of variables to create a single indicator. Candidate variables were identified using a multi-dimensional framework consisting of household demographics, household income, household expenses, financial stress indicators, food security, food affordability and food availability. The candidate variables were expressed as proportions, of either persons or households, in a geographic area. Principal Component Analysis was used to determine the final variables which resulted in a final set of weighted raw scores. These scores were then scaled to produce the index scores for the Food Stress Index for Western Australia. The results were compared with the Australian Bureau of Statistics' Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas to determine suitability. The Food Stress Index was found to be a suitable indicator of the relative risk of food stress in Western Australian households. The FSI adds specificity to indices of relative disadvantage specifically related to food insecurity and provides a useful tool for prioritising policy and other responses to this important public health issue.Entities:
Keywords: food affordability; food insecurity; food stress
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30597936 PMCID: PMC6339012 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16010079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Candidate variables for a Food Stress Index.
| Dimensions | Description of Measure | Description of Candidate Variables | Data Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Household demographics | Proportion households by family composition | Couple families with children under 15 | ABS: 2016 Census, Datapacks, General Community Profile, Western Australia [ |
| Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples | Proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander households | Indigenous status | ABS: 2016 Census, Datapacks, General Community Profile, Western Australia [ |
| Household income | Income quintiles of household | Proportion of households in the lowest income quintile | ABS: 2016 Census, Tablebuilder, Counting Persons, Place of Enumeration, Equivalised Total Household Income (weekly) [ |
| Household expenses | Proportion of income used for household expenses (excluding food) | Housing costs (rent/mortgage) | ABS: Household Expenditure Survey [ |
| Financial stress indicators | A measure of whether households may be experiencing economic hardship, based on how many of the financial stress indicators a household experiences. | Financial stress experiences (e.g., unable to raise funds for an emergency, unable to pay bills on time) | ABS: Household Expenditure Survey [ |
| Food affordability and access | Food affordability for the household. | Proportion of income required to purchase a healthy meal plan. | 2013 Food Access and Cost Survey [ |
Reduced set of variables used to construct the Food Stress Index.
| Dimensions | Description |
|---|---|
| Household demographics | Proportion of couple families with no children under 15 |
| Proportion of couple families with children under 15 | |
| Proportion of one parent families with no children under 15 | |
| Proportion of one parent families with children under 15 | |
| Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples | Proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander households |
| Household income | Proportion of households in the lowest equivalised household income quintile (i.e., less than $500 per week) |
| Proportion of households in the highest equivalised household income quintile (i.e., more than $1499 per week) | |
| Food affordability | Proportion of income required to buy healthy food–couple family on welfare income |
| Proportion of income required to buy healthy food–couple family on low income | |
| Proportion of income required to buy healthy food–couple family on average income | |
| Proportion of income required to buy healthy food–one parent family on welfare income | |
| Proportion of income required to buy healthy food–one parent family on low income | |
| Proportion of income required to buy healthy food–one parent family on average income |
Food Stress Index for Statistical Areas in Western Australia by quintile, ranging from 1 (least likelihood of food stress) to 5 (most likelihood of food stress).
| Food Stress Index Quintile | Western Australia Statistical Areas |
|---|---|
| 1 | Applecross—Ardross, Ashburton, Baldivis, Booragoon, Greenwood—Warwick, Innaloo—Doubleview, Karratha, Mount Hawthorn—Leederville, Murdoch—Kardinya, Newman, North Perth, Ocean Reef, Subiaco—Shenton Park, Success—Hammond Park, Wembley—West Leederville—Glendalough, Wembley Downs—Churchlands—Woodlands |
| 2 | Australind—Leschenault, Belmont—Ascot—Redcliffe, Bentley—Wilson—St James, Byford, Carramar, Coolbellup, Craigie—Beldon, Eaton—Pelican Point, Esperance Region, Kalgoorlie, Margaret River, Murray, Rivervale—Kewdale—Cloverdale, South Bunbury—Bunbury, Thornlie |
| 3 | Albany, Augusta, Busselton, Capel, Denmark, East Bunbury—Glen Iris, Esperance, Geraldton—North, Gingin—Dandaragan, Gnowangerup, Harvey, Maddington—Orange Grove—Martin, Manjimup, Pinjarra, Rockingham |
| 4 | Alexander Heights—Koondoola, Beckenham—Kenwick—Langford, Bridgetown—Boyup Brook, Broome, Dowerin, Exmouth, Kambalda—Coolgardie—Norseman, Kulin, Merredin, Moora, Mukinbudin, Narrogin, Northam, Pemberton, Roebourne |
| 5 | Armadale—Wungong—Brookdale, Calista, Carnarvon, Cooloongup, Derby—West Kimberley, East Pilbara, Geraldton, Girrawheen, Gosnells, Halls Creek, Kununurra, Leinster—Leonora, Meekatharra, Parmelia—Orelia, Plantagenet, Roebuck |