| Literature DB >> 36235603 |
Rachel A Murphy1,2, Yu Jacqueline Guo3, Heloise Sierra Melo Pinto Cordeiro3, Sumara Stroshein1, Casey Hamilton4, Sara Kozicky3.
Abstract
An estimated 20 to 50% of post-secondary students experience food insecurity. Students who are food insecure are more likely to have poor health and lower academic performance relative to food secure peers. Food hubs are physical or digital spaces that provide access to food initiatives and wraparound programs such as employment placement or income support are increasingly of interest as a means to respond to food insecurity. We conducted a scoping review to identify best practices and effective approaches to food hubs that promote food security in post-secondary institutions in North America. The Medline, Embase, CAB Direct and Web of Science databases were searched. A total of 4637 articles were identified and screened by two reviewers. Four articles were included. They encompassed a mix of interventions: a campus pantry and garden, a food rescue program, food literacy-based curriculum and a toolkit to support implementation of interventions on campus. The heterogeneity of studies precluded identification of best practices, but positive impacts of all interventions were noted on metrics such as self-efficacy and greater awareness of food insecurity. The gap in evidence on effective approaches that promote campus food security is a critical barrier to development and implementation of interventions, and should be addressed in future studies.Entities:
Keywords: food hub; food security; food systems; sustainability
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36235603 PMCID: PMC9572345 DOI: 10.3390/nu14193951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 6.706
Figure 1Overview of the study identification and screening process.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Authors | Location | Timeframe of Study | Target Population | Participant Characteristics | Study Design |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ullevig et al. [ | University of Texas at San Antonio | 2017–2018 | Students attending an urban institution | Survey of 438 students: 37% Hispanic, 22% African American, 15% Caucasian, 9% Multi-racial, 8% Asian, 9.6% Other/Unknown, 46% First-generation students, 7% had dependents, 28% were food insecure | Case Study |
| Frank et al. [ | La Salle University | Not reported | All students | Focus group of 38 undergraduate nutrition students. Survey of 206 students: 74% on-campus residents, 78% employed at least part-time, 36% food insecure | Program summary |
| Morgan et al. [ | Appalachian State University | 2019 | Students in a food science laboratory | Survey of 51 students: 92% Caucasian, 59% female, 47% Sophomore year, 66% lived off campus, 55% were not employed, 59% reported high food security at pre-assessment | Pre-post |
| Hagedorn et al. [ | Multiple institutes in the United States | Not reported | Stakeholders from post-secondary institutes | 30 stakeholders from 27 institutions completed a survey: 87% female, mean age 41 years, mean of 11.5 years in their profession | Cross-sectional |
Key findings of included studies.
| Authors | Objective | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Ullevig et al. [ | To describe lessons learned from the establishment of a community garden and food pantry | Several challenges were identified including high turnover of students and volunteers, lack of awareness of the garden/pantry, lack of capacity for fresh food donations, limited variety of foods offered. Successes included staff involvement for continuity, increased awareness of food insecurity and sustainability within the institution in part due to the social marketing plan |
| Frank [ | To describe experiences and perspectives of students who participated in a pilot of an online program to distribute free food that would otherwise be thrown away | Over 12 months, 451 students enrolled in the pilot program with increasing engagement overtime. Reduced waste of catered foods, normalization of food rescue. The online program was effective, simple and budget friendly. |
| Morgan et al. [ | To implement a food literacy-based curriculum to increase food literacy-based skills and self-efficacy and reduce food insecurity among students enrolled in an established Food Science Laboratory course | Improvements were observed for food literacy-based behaviors, food literacy based self-efficacy and confidence in cooking and food preparation skills. Overall positive experiences in the program. No change in food security was observed (59% high food security at pre-assessment versus 63% at post-assessment). |
| Hagedorn et al. [ | To develop a toolkit for improving food security at higher education institutions based on a literature review and evaluate the toolkit among stakeholders | The toolkit included recommendations on implementation of food pantries, campus gardens, farmers markets, dining and recovery program, mobile applications and policy change. The toolkit was highly rated with respect to layout, content and initiatives/programs included but 50% identified barriers to implementation of the toolkit. |