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Senior Hunger
As a nation, we have a special responsibility
to vulnerable populations such as the elderly.
Older Americans have built the economy and national infrastructure from
which we now benefit.
Raised during the Great Depression, they went on to defend our freedom in
the Second World War and won the cold war.
America's older citizens have rightly been
called the "greatest generation." It is morally reprehensible that the
people that built this country should suffer hunger in a land of plenty,
which they helped to create.
Food insecurity among this vulnerable population is especially troublesome
because they have unique nutritional needs and may require special diets for
medical conditions.
In February 2006, America's Second
Harvest released its fourth and most comprehensive study of hunger in the
U.S.: Hunger in America 2006 [i].
The following are some key findings of the study regarding the elderly in
our country:
Nearly 3 million elderly persons are served by the America’s Second
Harvest Network each year. 21.5 percent of client households have at
least one member who is age 65 or over, and 52 percent of these
households are food insecure - an estimated 1.2 million households.
Among all clients served by the America's Second Harvest, 10
percent were seniors age 65 or over while 17.3 percent of adult clients
interviewed at emergency feeding programs were 65 or older.
52 percent of all client households with seniors are food insecure,
and 65 percent of these households lived in poverty.
Among client households with seniors, 27.4 percent are served by
emergency feeding programs in center cities, 25 percent in suburban
areas, and 18.1 percent in rural areas.
Among all client households with at least one senior, 11.7
percent use senior brown bag programs, 18.3 percent attend senior
nutrition sites (such as senior centers that serve lunch) and 5.7
percent receive home-delivered meals or meals-on-wheels.
28.7 percent of client households with seniors indicated that they
have had to choose between food and medical care and 31 percent had to
choose between food and paying for heat/utilities.
Other Facts:
The Census Bureau reported
in their most recent release that 6.5 percent of households with an
elderly person are food insecure. Over 460,000 of those households
experienced food insecurity with hunger during 2004
[ii].
9.8 percent of the elderly
live below the poverty line - nearly 3.5 million older Americans
[iii].
The rate of food
insecurity among elderly households with incomes at or below 130% of the
poverty line is 18.2 percent[iv].
Elderly households are
much less likely to receive food stamps than non-elderly households,
even when expected benefits are roughly the same
[v].
Seniors require greater
consideration towards their health and medical needs that can become
compromised when there is not enough food to eat. A study which
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. [vi]
For seniors, protecting
oneself from food insecurity and hunger is more difficult than for the
general population. For example, a study that focused on the
experience of food insecurity among the elderly population found that
food insecure seniors sometimes had enough money to purchase food but
did not have the resources to access or prepare food due to lack of
transportation, functional limitations, or health problems. [vii]
[i] Mathematica
Policy Research. America’s Second Harvest – The Nation’s Food Bank
Network. Hunger in America 2006. February 2006.
[ii] Nord, Mark,
M. Andrews, S. Carlson. United States Department of
Agriculture/Economic Research Service. Household Food Security in
the United States, 2004. (ERR-11) October 2005.
[iii] DeNavas-Walt,
Carmen, B. D. Proctor, C.H. Lee. U.S. Census Bureau. Income, Poverty,
and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2005.
August 2006.
[iv] Nord, Mark,
M. Andrews, S. Carlson. United States Department of
Agriculture/Economic Research Service. Household Food Security in
the United States, 2004. (ERR-11) October 2005.
[v] United States
Department of Agriculture/Office of Analysis, Nutrition, and Evaluation.
Elderly Participation and the Minimum Benefit. November 2002.
[vi] Lee JS,
Frongillo, Jr. EA. Nutritional and health consequences are associated
with food insecurity among U.S. elderly persons. J. Nutr. 131:
1503-1509, 2001
[vii] Wolfe
WS, Frongillo EA, Valois P. Understanding the experience of food
insecurity by elders suggests ways to improve its measurement. J. Nutr.
133:2762-2769, 2003. |