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Household Crowding and Food Insecurity Among Inuit Families With School-Aged Children in the Canadian Arctic
Authors:Maria Ruiz-Castell  Gina Muckle   éric Dewailly  Joseph L. Jacobson  Sandra W. Jacobson  Pierre Ayotte  Mylène Riva
Abstract:Objectives. We examined the relation of household crowding to food insecurity among Inuit families with school-aged children in Arctic Quebec.Methods. We analyzed data collected between October 2005 and February 2010 from 292 primary caregiver–child dyads from 14 Inuit communities. We collected information about household conditions, food security, and family socioeconomic characteristics by interviews. We used logistic regression models to examine the association between household crowding and food insecurity.Results. Nearly 62% of Inuit families in the Canadian Arctic resided in more crowded households, placing them at risk for food insecurity. About 27% of the families reported reducing the size of their children’s meals because of lack of money. The likelihood of reducing the size of children’s meals was greater in crowded households (odds ratio = 3.73; 95% confidence interval = 1.96, 7.12). After we adjusted for different socioeconomic characteristics, results remained statistically significant.Conclusions. Interventions operating across different levels (community, regional, national) are needed to ensure food security in the region. Targeting families living in crowded conditions as part of social and public health policies aiming to reduce food insecurity in the Arctic could be beneficial.Inadequate housing conditions (e.g., crowding and structural damage) are prevalent among First Nations and Inuit communities in Canada and elsewhere.1 In Nunavik, the Inuit homeland in Arctic Quebec, Canada, the government promoted the relocation of many Inuit families to fledgling communities during the 1950s. Relocated families were moved to small, poorly heated and insulated accommodations. Since then, different programs have been designed by the federal, provincial, territorial, and regional governments to address the housing problem in Nunavik and across the Canadian Arctic.2 At present, more than 90% of the Nunavik population has reported living in social (subsidized) housing.3 In this region, social housing units are allocated locally through a point-based system set according to specific criteria, so that applicants most in need are given first priority (e.g., families with lower income, with young children, and living in overcrowded dwellings).2 Rent is set according to household income, while also considering the cost of living.4 Thus, in Nunavik, housing tenure does not differentiate between households on the basis of financial security or income level, given that nearly all of the population resides in social housing. Such organization rather highlights the high degree of financial need throughout this population and a limited private residential market unattainable by most of the population.Household overcrowding, generally defined as more than 1 person per room,5 is particularly problematic in Nunavik. According to Statistics Canada, 49% of the 2006 population lived in overcrowded houses.5 Often, overcrowding is approached as a consequence of economic difficulties. Living in smaller homes or in shared accommodation has been known as a way to lower living costs to dedicate the available financial resources to other basic necessities.6 In such situations, overcrowded households may experience higher food insecurity as a result of a precarious economic situation. In the particular case of Nunavik, however, crowding is a direct consequence of an underlying, and persistent, lack of housing. Household crowding in Nunavik is not only a product of financial difficulties but also an effect of the rapidly growing and young population. Between 2001 and 2006, the population in Nunavik increased by 12% compared with 4% for the province of Quebec. During the past 3 decades, the population has doubled from 5860 in 1986 to 12 090 in 2011.7 In 2008, it was estimated that more than 900 new housing units were needed, but only 239 units were constructed.8 The housing backlog is further compounded by high costs of construction and short building seasons.The housing situation in Nunavik and throughout the Canadian Arctic raises concerns, in terms of both public health and the health of each individual resident, especially that of children.9–14 Indeed, studies have shown that household crowding is associated with poorer respiratory health, especially among children.12,15 In crowded dwellings, the lack of privacy and the difficulty of withdrawing from (unwanted) social interactions may limit the ability of controlling one’s home situation and lead to “overarousal.”16 Household crowding also has been identified as eliciting chronic stress responses in adults,17 anger and depression18 with possible repercussions on behaviors,19–22 withdrawal,23 and reduced social support24 that, we contend, could influence household food insecurity.Food insecurity occurs when it is not possible to obtain safe, sufficient, and nutritiously adequate foods for a healthy life in socially and culturally acceptable ways.25–27 Studies have shown that in a situation of food insecurity, adults generally first reduce their own food consumption. As the situation becomes more severe, children’s diets also will be reduced, particularly in low-income households with single mothers.28,29 In 2012, 14% of the households in Canada experienced food insecurity.30 In Canadian Arctic communities, food insecurity is high: 62.2% and 31.6% of children live in food-insecure households in Nunavut and Northwest Territories, respectively.30 In Nunavik, the proportion of Inuit children experiencing food insecurity reached 30% in 2006.31 Studies emphasize that a reduction of the quality in diet and nutrient intake resulting from food insecurity is linked to various health issues in children, including poor health,25,32–34 developmental delays,35 and poor mental health.36Access to food products supplied from southern regions of Quebec comes at a very high cost to Nunavik, with an average price 57% higher than in the provincial capital.37 Despite efforts to redress this situation, food costs remain very high and often inaccessible to many Nunavik families who must resort to reducing the amount of food supplies or buying products of lower nutritional quality,38 which compromises health and well-being.36,37,39In a study conducted among low-income families in the United States, Cutts et al.40 found a higher risk of food insecurity and child food insecurity in households with higher housing insecurity. In their study, crowding and multiple moves were considered as indicators of housing insecurity. This association was independent of maternal and family characteristics such as education and household employment. In a recent study involving Inuit households from Nunavut, in the eastern Canadian Arctic, Huet et al.41 reported higher food insecurity among Inuit living in overcrowded households and in houses requiring major repairs. This observation, however, was based on bivariate associations between housing conditions and food insecurity and did not account for other factors such as socioeconomic conditions. These studies nonetheless suggest that food insecurity is not only explained in terms of low socioeconomic status and poverty.40,42We examined whether household crowding was associated with food insecurity among Inuit families with school-aged children, independently of socioeconomic disadvantage.
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