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Very low food security in the USA is linked with exposure to violence
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Very low food security in the USA is linked with exposure to violence

Mariana M Chilton, Jenny R Rabinowich and Nicholas H Woolf
Public health nutrition, v 17(1)
Jan 2014
PMID: 23432921
url
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980013000281View
Published, Version of Record (VoR) Open

Abstract

Public Assistance - economics Humans Risk Factors Food - economics Depression Poverty - economics Mental Health Violence - psychology Food Supply - statistics & numerical data Child Abuse Mothers - psychology Young Adult Adult Female Surveys and Questionnaires Violence - statistics & numerical data Child Philadelphia
To investigate characteristics of exposure to violence in relation to food security status among female-headed households. Ongoing mixed-method participatory action study. Questions addressed food insecurity, public assistance, and maternal and child health. Grounded theory analysis of qualitative themes related to violence was performed. These themes were then categorized by food security status. Homes of low-income families in Philadelphia, PA, USA. Forty-four mothers of children under 3 years of age participating in public assistance programmes. Forty women described exposure to violence ranging from fear of violence to personal experiences with rape. Exposure to violence affected mental health, ability to continue school and obtain work with living wages, and subsequently the ability to afford food. Exposure to violence during childhood and being a perpetrator of violence were both linked to very low food security status and depressive symptoms. Ten of seventeen (59%) participants reporting very low food security described life-changing violence, compared with three of fifteen (20%) participants reporting low food security and four of twelve (33%) reporting food security. Examples of violent experiences among the very low food secure group included exposure to child abuse, neglect and rape that suggest exposure to violence is an important factor in the experience of very low food security. Descriptions of childhood trauma and life-changing violence are linked with severe food security. Policy makers and clinicians should incorporate violence prevention efforts when addressing hunger.

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96 citations in Scopus

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Web of Science research areas
Nutrition & Dietetics
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
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