The relationship between food insecurity, purchasing patterns and perceptions of the food environment in urban slums in Ibadan, Nigeria

IF 1.9 Q3 NUTRITION & DIETETICS BMC Nutrition Pub Date : 2024-09-18 DOI:10.1186/s40795-024-00929-8
Temitope Ilori, Nicola Christofides, Laurel Baldwin-Ragaven
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Abstract

Rapid urbanisation without concomitant infrastructure development has led to the creation of urban slums throughout sub-Saharan Africa. People living in urban slums are particularly vulnerable to food insecurity due to the lack of physical and economic accessibility to food. Hence, it is important to explore how vulnerable groups living in slums interact with the food environment. This study assessed the relationships between food insecurity, including restrictive coping strategies, food purchasing patterns and perceptions about the food environment among dwellers of selected urban slums in Ibadan, Nigeria. This community-based cross-sectional study was conducted with people responsible for food procurement from 590 randomly selected households in two urban slums in Ibadan. Food insecurity and restrictive coping strategies were assessed using the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale and the Coping Strategy Index, respectively. We examined purchasing patterns of participants by assessing the procurement of household foodstuffs in different categories, as well as by vendor type. Participants’ perceptions of the food environment were derived through a five-item composite score measuring food availability, affordability and quality. Chi-square tests and logistic regression models analysed associations between food insecurity, purchasing patterns and perceptions of the food environment. The prevalence of food insecurity in the sample was 88%, with 40.2% of the households experiencing severe food insecurity. Nearly a third (32.5%) of the households used restrictive coping strategies such as limiting the size of food portions at mealtimes, while 28.8% reduced the frequency of their daily meals. Participants purchased food multiple times a week, primarily from formal and informal food markets rather than from wholesalers and supermarkets. Only a few households grew food or had livestock (3.2%). Food insecure households had a lower perceived access to the food environment, with an approximate 10% increase in access score per one-unit decrease in food insecurity (AOR = 0.90, 95% CI: 0.84, 0.96). The most procured foods among all households were fish (72.5%), bread (60.3%), rice (56.3%), yam and cassava flours (50.2%). Food-secure households procured fruit, dairy and vegetable proteins more frequently. Food insecurity remains a serious public health challenge in the urban slums of Ibadan. Perceptions of greater access to the food environment was associated with increasing food security. Interventions should focus on creating more robust social and financial protections, with efforts to improve livelihoods to ensure food security among urban slum-dwellers.
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尼日利亚伊巴丹城市贫民窟食品不安全、购买模式和食品环境认知之间的关系
快速的城市化进程没有伴随着基础设施的发展,导致整个撒哈拉以南非洲地区出现了城市贫民窟。生活在城市贫民窟的人们由于缺乏获得食物的物质和经济条件,特别容易受到粮食不安全的影响。因此,探讨生活在贫民窟的弱势群体如何与食物环境互动非常重要。本研究评估了尼日利亚伊巴丹部分城市贫民窟居民的食品不安全(包括限制性应对策略)、食品购买模式和对食品环境的看法之间的关系。这项以社区为基础的横断面研究是从伊巴丹两个城市贫民窟随机抽取的 590 户家庭中负责食品采购的人员中进行的。食物不安全和限制性应对策略分别采用家庭食物不安全获取量表和应对策略指数进行评估。我们通过评估不同类别家庭食品的采购情况以及供应商类型,研究了参与者的采购模式。参与者对食品环境的看法是通过衡量食品的可获得性、可负担性和质量的五项综合评分得出的。卡方检验和逻辑回归模型分析了粮食不安全、购买模式和粮食环境感知之间的关联。样本中粮食不安全的发生率为 88%,40.2% 的家庭经历过严重的粮食不安全。近三分之一(32.5%)的家庭采用限制性应对策略,如限制进餐时食物的份量,28.8%的家庭减少了每日进餐的次数。参与者每周多次购买食物,主要是从正规和非正规食品市场购买,而不是从批发商和超市购买。只有少数家庭种植粮食或饲养牲畜(3.2%)。粮食不安全家庭对粮食环境的可获得性感知较低,粮食不安全程度每降低一个单位,可获得性得分就会增加约 10%(AOR = 0.90,95% CI:0.84,0.96)。所有家庭中购买最多的食物是鱼(72.5%)、面包(60.3%)、大米(56.3%)、山药和木薯粉(50.2%)。粮食无保障家庭更经常购买水果、奶制品和蔬菜蛋白。在伊巴丹的城市贫民窟,粮食不安全仍然是一个严重的公共卫生挑战。认为有更多机会获得食物环境与提高粮食安全有关。干预措施应侧重于建立更有力的社会和财政保护,努力改善生计,以确保城市贫民窟居民的粮食安全。
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来源期刊
BMC Nutrition
BMC Nutrition Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
131
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊最新文献
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