Hunger alleviation, tackling food poverty or challenging the determinants of poverty: What can Public Health do? Tony Cooke Head of Health Improvement Kirklees Public Health Food poverty is… “the inability to afford or to have access to food to make up a healthy diet” (Department of Health) “Food poverty is worse diet, worse access, worse health, higher percentage of income on food, and less choice from a restricted range of foods.” (Tim Lang, Professor of Food Policy at City University, London) Less opportunity for physical activity and large number of takeaways in deprived areas . Lack of cooking skills & confidence Shift work and irregular hours Low income and less healthy eating behaviours Lack of exposure to sunlight = Vit D deficiency Lack of cooking utensils Access to affordable healthy food Irregular meal times Psycho-social stress and stigma Lack of cooking in the home. Families rarely sit down together to eat a meal Lower consumption of fruit and veg and a higher intake of fats, sugars + salt. Problems with overweight and underweight Food budget will often be reduced before other household outgoings Space for preparing and eating as a family Food poverty and diet of people on low incomes Food behaviour linked to other health behaviours: physical activity ,alcohol, smoking Increased numbers accessing food banks Increased under nutrition Increase in numbers overweight and obese Perfect storm • Population wide people are eating less nutritious food • Starker inequalities in income, stark inequalities in diets and food skills • In Kirklees lower income groups less confident at cooking from scratch • ‘Bad’ food can cost less per calorie 20,840 21% 42,800 Child Poverty 16% 22,040 Working age Poverty 33% Poverty in Kirklees Pensioner Poverty Cost of living increases 2008 - 2012 18% Food Annual benefits uprating 2008 - 2012 27% 25% Energy Minimum Income basket Annual benefits uprating 2013 onwards 2.2% 2.2% Universal uprating Disabled people and pensioners uprating 1% Work related benefits uprating The biggest losers £bn Some households and individuals, notably sickness and disability claimants, will be hit by several different elements of the reforms. £5.0 £4.5 £4.0 £3.5 £3.0 £2.5 £2.0 £1.5 £1.0 £0.5 £0.0 Incapacity Benefits Tax Credits 1% up-rating of most working-age benefits average loss per affected household/individual average loss per affected household/individual £3,480 £810 Housing Benefit reforms Discussions in Kirklees… All people in poverty are at risk of food poverty but individual circumstances are different • Some people are more resilient • Some have stronger communities/social capital • Some grow their own food or have an allotment Benefit sanctions are an exception • Most people on benefits do not attend food banks but most people sanctioned do • Increasing numbers are sanctioned The Kirklees response: Proportionate universalism Narrative for change: the food charter and strategy A population level approach where possible • • • • • • • Food for Life Partnership in schools to improve quality and uptake of meals Silver catering award provider supplies food to all but one Kirklees school Projects to increase food growing across Kirklees National Child Measurement Programme Healthy Choice Award targets take-aways and restaurants Recycling and food waste projects Better procurement promotes more local jobs Targeted services where necessary • • • 40 growing sites in areas of multiple deprivation, focus on social housing, disabilities, LTCs Settings based approach to target hospitals, early years and care settings, using FFLP and development of similar standards to support sustainable food Food banks+ i.e. skills training, cook and eat sessions and (planned) growing sites Questions for consideration • Do we need to make a clear distinction between hunger, food poverty and poverty? • Should we focus on alleviation of hunger, improvements to diet/nutrition or both? • How to engage with public health teams to address food poverty? • How can public health engage other partners to address food poverty? • What are the consequences of food poverty? • Which areas can public health address? Focus on low / medium input, high impact • Can local authorities develop systematic strategies to address health inequalities including food poverty and poverty more generally • How can they join wider lobbying efforts around poverty and its impact • What action can you commit to taking forward when you get back to your City/town? What’s happened is that the level of income inequality has been increasing. And by that we mean that the very rich have been getting more and more money, and people lower down, have been getting less. Michael Marmot, 2013