Every day, millions of children in America go to
bed hungry.
It is a tragic reality that the United States, one of the richest nations in
the world, is also plagued with a poverty-driven hunger crisis. The statistics
tell the troubling story. In 2005:
Poverty is forcing millions of Americans into a hunger crisis. Their hunger
emergency is defined by food insecurity, which is the lack of access to
sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs for an active
and healthy life.
Families find themselves buying cheaper and less nutritious food, or
cutting entire meals out of their diet, just to make ends meet. Increasing over
time, this pattern leads to chronic malnutrition, affecting children and
families in profoundly destructive ways.
"[Hunger] weakens families, and prevents our nation from reaching its
full potential."
Hungry children are not able to play and learn like other children,
and are therefore less likely to become productive adults. Compromised health
can lead to both short- and long-term problems; children and the elderly are
particularly vulnerable. Hungry employees are less productive and more likely to
make errors, putting their job at risk, which further perpetuates the poverty
cycle.
Both the commonplace demands of daily life and unexpected, dramatic events
can easily push families below the poverty line. "Families are often forced
to make the tradeoff between food and other expenses. Health care is a
particular problem. In poor, rural communities families often have no choice but
to use the emergency room for routine health care. This is very expensive. Car
repairs are another significant and unexpected expense. If the family car needs
repair and it is the end of the month, when cash reserves are low, a family will
have no choice but to reduce food intake to get the car back on the road in
order to go to work."
The Hidden Poor
Food insecurity affects many segments of the American population, including:
Annually, the America's Second Harvest Network of
food banks and food-rescue programs secures and distributes more than two
billion pounds of food.
: According to the USDA, an estimated
12.4 million children lived in food-insecure households in 2005.
: 6% of households with seniors (1.6
million households) were food insecure (low food security and very low food
security).
A study that examined the health and nutritional status of seniors
found that food-insecure seniors had significantly lower intakes of vital
nutrients in their diets when compared to their food-secure counterparts. In
addition, food-insecure seniors were 2.33 times more likely to report fair/poor
health status and had higher nutritional risk.
: In 2002, over 4 million
non-elderly, low-income families reported using a food pantry in the past 12
months. In 2002, nearly 2 million working parents with children turned to food
pantries.
: 16.6% of all rural households
with children are food insecure (low food security and very low food security),
an estimated 1 million children.
"Decades of research and experience with antipoverty programs have made
it clear that poverty involves very complex, interrelated and sometimes
intractable socioeconomic, family, and individual issues."
Because the causes are so complicated, it is not surprising that the
solutions are equally as difficult to implement. Improving education in poverty
stricken areas and changing public policy both affect change, and providing a
safety net for those individuals in immediate crisis are all important areas
that must continue to be approached with staunch purpose.
"The test of our progress is not whether we add
more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough
for those who have too little."
—Franklin D. Roosevelt
One person or one idea alone cannot unravel the hunger crisis. We must
continue to alleviate the immediate suffering of the hungry by sending food to
families in need, but simultaneously we must move toward solutions that will end
the poverty cycle. By banding together and supporting nonprofit relief
organizations, we can work toward affecting change nationally while immediately
providing enough for those who have too little.
|