Mutual aid food sharing during the COVID-19 pandemic: case study of Tompkins County, NY.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Public Health Nutrition Pub Date : 2024-10-21 DOI:10.1017/S1368980024001083
Karla L Hanson, Sarah Coupal, Emily Grace, Elizabeth Jesch, Sonja Lockhart, Leah C Volpe
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Abstract

Objective: The COVID-19 pandemic led to greater food insecurity across the world, and government and charitable organisations did not always respond quickly enough or adequately to meet food needs. Mutual aid (MA) - neighbours helping neighbours to meet survival needs - mobilised residents to share food, often through outdoor food cabinets and refrigerators. This study aims to understand how MA food sharing was implemented, including food availability, acceptability, accessibility and impact on food access.

Design: This case study describes one MA food sharing system by triangulating data from flyers, notes from nineteen volunteer meetings, six cabinet host interviews, data extracted from 1387 social media posts and 356 photographs, and 111 resident surveys.

Setting: Tompkins County, NY, USA (total population about 100 000).

Results: We estimated high availability of food: approximately 250 000 food servings were shared monthly, mostly carbohydrates. Most residents obtaining food found it acceptable, including satisfaction with food safety and cleanliness, food quantity, and ease of travel to the cabinets but were less satisfied with food variety. MA food sharing was accessible to food-insecure, unemployed and disabled residents, but not other priority populations. About two-thirds of residents reported improved food access. Volunteers exhibited tenacity and ingenuity in meeting operational challenges which included trash and vandalism, winter weather and unusable food contributions while foregrounding residents' safety and privacy as shared values and navigating conflicting views about fairness.

Conclusions: In times of crisis, MA can improve food access through free food sharing cabinets, but barriers include unacceptable food contributions and outdoor conditions.

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COVID-19 大流行期间的互助食品共享:纽约州汤普金斯县案例研究。
目标:COVID-19 大流行导致全球粮食更加不安全,而政府和慈善组织并不总是能够足够迅速或充分地满足粮食需求。互助(MA)--邻居帮助邻居满足生存需要--动员居民分享食物,通常是通过户外食品柜和冰箱。本研究旨在了解如何实施互助食物共享,包括食物的可获得性、可接受性、可获取性以及对食物获取的影响:本案例研究通过对传单数据、19 次志愿者会议记录、6 次橱柜主人访谈、从 1387 条社交媒体帖子和 356 张照片中提取的数据以及 111 份居民调查进行三角分析,描述了马萨诸塞州的一个食物共享系统:地点:美国纽约州汤普金斯县(总人口约 10 万):我们估计食物的可获得性很高:每月约有 25 万份食物被分享,其中大部分是碳水化合物。大多数获得食物的居民认为食物是可以接受的,包括对食品安全和清洁度、食物数量以及前往橱柜的便利性的满意度,但对食物种类的满意度较低。缺乏食品安全保障、失业和残疾的居民可以获得马萨诸塞州的食物共享,但其他重点人群则无法获得。约有三分之二的居民表示,他们获得食物的机会有所改善。志愿者们表现出了顽强的毅力和聪明才智,在应对垃圾和破坏行为、冬季天气和无法使用的食物捐助等运营挑战时,将居民的安全和隐私作为共同的价值观,并克服了关于公平性的冲突观点:结论:在危机时期,马萨诸塞州可以通过免费食物共享柜来改善食物获取,但障碍包括无法接受的食物捐赠和户外条件。
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来源期刊
Public Health Nutrition
Public Health Nutrition 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
521
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Public Health Nutrition provides an international peer-reviewed forum for the publication and dissemination of research and scholarship aimed at understanding the causes of, and approaches and solutions to nutrition-related public health achievements, situations and problems around the world. The journal publishes original and commissioned articles, commentaries and discussion papers for debate. The journal is of interest to epidemiologists and health promotion specialists interested in the role of nutrition in disease prevention; academics and those involved in fieldwork and the application of research to identify practical solutions to important public health problems.
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