Thank you.
I was under the misperception that I was going to be making a PowerPoint presentation today, so what you have in front of you is a handout. It focuses on the relationship between low income and healthy eating. If you would draw your attention to it, I'll use it as I walk through some of the data I want you to be attentive to.
First of all, I would like you to take a look at page 2 of the handout, which is our understanding of the relationship between income and food purchasing. If you take a look at this graph, there are a couple of things I want you to notice.
First of all, as income rises, the purchasing of fruits and vegetables steadily increases. This is data based on household food expenditures from the food expenditures survey conducted by Statistics Canada. As income falls--as we get to the low end of that graph--what you can see are perilous drops in food purchasing, in particular for fruits and vegetables, and also for milk products.
The lines on this graph come from simply dividing food purchases according to the four food groups in Canada's food guide. When we break open those food groups and do a more careful examination of what's being purchased within those categories, what we see are more patterns that raise concern about healthy eating habits and how they are apparently privileged habits for Canadians.
When we break open those categories, what we see amongst the meat and meat alternatives group, for example, is that low-income Canadians are more likely to be purchasing higher-fat meats. As income rises we see the increased purchasing of lean meats. Similarly with milk products, as income rises households are more likely to be purchasing low-fat milk. Breakfast cereals are also more likely to be purchased by people with higher incomes.
So there are very clear income patterns in the nature of food purchasing among Canadian households.
As we translate those food purchasing behaviours into nutrients, we also see clear evidence of a social disadvantage amongst low-income Canadians. As income rises, the amount of nutrients in the food that is being purchased also rises. Amongst low-income households, if we look at what they're purchasing in stores, we see foods that are higher in energy density and lower in nutrient density. I can talk more about those two terms later if you want me to.
So our picture is one of a very clear income pattern in relationship to the kinds of foods that households are able to purchase.
Another window through which we are able to take a look at issues of income and their impact on healthy eating behaviours is through the food security measurements that have been included in recent national surveys. In your handout you have three questions that appeared on the 2000-01 Canadian community health survey, questions asking people how often in the last 12 months they worried about not being able to get enough food because they didn't have money for food; how often did they not eat the quality or variety of foods that they thought they needed because they lacked for money; and worst of all, how often did they not have enough to eat because they lacked for money. When those three questions were put on a national survey a few years ago, 3.7 million Canadians said “yes” to at least one of them.
The pattern of who is responding affirmatively to these questions is very clear. As we look at the adequacy of household incomes, it's very apparent that as income adequacy deteriorates, the likelihood of families reporting food insecurity rises dramatically, so much so that by the time we get to the bottom end of the economic spectrum, almost half of Canadian families are reporting food insecurity problems such as identified in those three very simple questions.
When we go a bit deeper in terms of asking the question of who it is who's saying they were having problems getting enough to eat or lacking the quality of foods that they think they need because they lack money for food, the pattern is even more disturbing. As we look at their sources of income, we can see, as you can see on page 11 of your handout, that the likelihood of somebody reporting problems of food insecurity on these surveys is triple if they are on social assistance. They are almost four times as likely to report often not having enough to eat if their main source of income is social assistance.
Another population group that is at particularly high risk for food insecurity is the one supported by federally run programs like employment insurance.
You'll note also on page 11 that those who appear to be protected from problems of food insecurity in our population are seniors. On that I would applaud you all as a positive statement on social policy, but that's the only positive statement I'll make today.
Before I move on, let's talk more about social assistance. Why is it that people on welfare are so likely to report problems of food inadequacy and food insecurity? It is because welfare rates, while managed at the provincial level, are all substantially lower than our notions of poverty. Across this country repeatedly, when people compare welfare incomes to any measures of expenditures required for meeting basic needs, we find that welfare rates are woefully inadequate. It would appear that the provinces are in a race to the bottom.
Other federal or provincial policies of particular relevance to the problem of food insecurity amongst low-income Canadians are the gutting of funding for social housing; the restructuring of employment insurance; and the national child benefit supplement program, which was a promising program when it was announced as a way to offset the ravages of child poverty in this country, but one that has been clawed back from welfare recipients in most provinces so that it has absolutely no impact on their health or well-being.
Why does this matter in terms of childhood obesity or health? It is because we know that people who are reporting food insecurity have substantially poorer dietary intakes. From examinations of dietary intake data, we also know that in households that are food insecure, there's evidence that mothers will sacrifice their own intakes for the sake of children. In fact, children—and particularly young children—are among the most advantaged in these households, but even there, there are indications of compromises in intake. The definitive analysis on this relationship has yet to come to you, because we are still in the process of examining the most recent Canadian community health survey, where we have nationally representative intake data.
The relationships between food insecurity and health are also cause for concern. Cross-sectional analyses repeatedly demonstrate associations between household food insecurity and poorer mental, physical, and social health and well-being amongst both children and adults. There is some evidence of problems related to body weight, although again we'd caution you that in terms of childhood obesity, those results need to wait until there's more analysis of this current CCHS data set.
I'll leave you with just a couple of comments from some research that we have in the field now in Toronto. We're currently doing a study funded by CIHR, looking at 500 low-income households in twelve high-poverty neighbourhoods in Toronto. We are simply going into low-income neighbourhoods, going up to the doors of market rental and subsidized housing units, and knocking on the door. If someone has a child under the age of 18 and if they have a low income—and we are using a very generous threshold there—we invite them to participate in an interview. We get 66% of them agreeing to that interview, and they provide some insight into the prevalence and the experience of food insecurity amongst low-income families in at least one major urban area.
There are three things I want to highlight from that study. The first is that with our methodology, we find that 65% of families that we are encountering are reporting problems of food insecurity. When we look at the issue of food retail access—which I know is an issue this committee has dabbled in—we can see that the access to food at major discount supermarkets differs between these twelve high-poverty neighbourhoods. There absolutely are differences in the urban core in terms of access to food retail opportunities.
However, when we look at food retail access in relationship to food insecurity, we find no relationship. When we look at it in relation to the purchasing of fruits and vegetables, again there is no association. So while I know food retail access is a major concern in some areas, I would caution you against making too much of that as you think about problems of accessing food for low-income Canadians. From our research, we would argue that this is more of a problem of purchasing power than it is one of food retail access.
We've also taken a look at the impact of community food initiatives, such as food banks, community gardens, community kitchens, and school feeding programs. While we find some participation in those programs by the families we've interviewed, in no case do we see any evidence that participation in those programs is protective. In fact, it looks like it's absolutely irrelevant in some cases.
Lastly, because of the way we've sampled our families, we've looked at the issues of subsidized housing and housing affordability. What is it that seems to determine which families are most likely to report problems of food insecurity in this sample of 500 low-income families in Toronto? Two things: income and housing affordability.
To summarize, then, I have tried to make the case to you as quickly as I can that the inadequacy of household incomes for low-income Canadians is a serious barrier to healthy eating. I believe that barrier in many ways reflects a failure of social policy. The fact that we can find such extraordinarily high rates of food insecurity amongst particular subgroups of our low-income population, defined by simple markers like welfare, speaks strongly to the failure of any semblance of a social safety net to protect those at the bottom end of the economic spectrum from very serious food problems.
The levels of food deprivation that we're documenting, the levels of nutritional compromise that we're documenting, are a real concern. They speak strongly to the need for federal leadership around income support programs, to ensure that people actually have enough money to buy the food they need to feed themselves and their children.
Thank you.