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Prevalence and sociodemographic risk factors related to household food security in Aboriginal peoples in Canada

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2009

Noreen D Willows*
Affiliation:
410 Ag/For Building, Alberta Institute of Human Nutrition, Department of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada, T6G 2P5
Paul Veugelers
Affiliation:
School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Kim Raine
Affiliation:
School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Stefan Kuhle
Affiliation:
School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
*
*Corresponding author: Email Noreen.willows@ualberta.ca
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Abstract

Objective

Canada’s Aboriginal population is vulnerable to food insecurity and increasingly lives off-reserve. The Canadian Community Health Survey, Cycle 2.2 Nutrition, was used to compare the prevalence and sociodemographic correlates of food insecurity between non-Aboriginal and off-reserve Aboriginal households.

Design

Food insecurity status was based on Health Canada’s revised interpretation of responses to the US Household Food Security Survey Module. Logistic regression was used to assess if Aboriginal households were at higher risk for food insecurity than non-Aboriginal households, adjusting for household sociodemographic factors.

Setting

Canada.

Subjects

Households (n 35,107), 1528 Aboriginal and 33 579 non-Aboriginal.

Results

Thirty-three per cent of Aboriginal households were food insecure as compared with 9 % of non-Aboriginal households (univariate OR 5·2, 95 % CI 4·2, 6·3). Whereas 14 % of Aboriginal households had severe food insecurity, 3 % of non-Aboriginal households did. The prevalence of sociodemographic risk factors for household food insecurity was higher for Aboriginal households. Aboriginal households were more likely to have three or more children (14 % v. 5 %), be lone-parent households (2 1 % v. 5 %), not have home ownership (52 % v. 31 %), have educational attainment of secondary school or less (43 % v. 26 %), have income from sources other than wages or salaries (38 % v. 29 %), and be in the lowest income adequacy category (33 % v. 12 %). Adjusted for these sociodemographic factors, Aboriginal households retained a higher risk for food insecurity than non-Aboriginal households (OR 2·6, 95 % CI 2·1, 3·2).

Conclusions

Off-reserve Aboriginal households in Canada merit special attention for income security and poverty alleviation initiatives.

Information

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2008
Figure 0

Table 1 Distribution of sociodemographic factors within households, prevalence of food insecurity by category of sociodemographic variable, and the unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios and 95 % confidence intervals for household food insecurity: Canadian Community Health Survey, Cycle 2.2 Nutrition, 2004

Figure 1

Table 2 Aboriginal status adjusted and multivariable adjusted odds ratios and 95 % confidence intervals for living in a household with food insecurity: Canadian Community Health Survey, Cycle 2.2 Nutrition, 2004