Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5201
Title: Food Insecurity among American Indian and Alaska Native People: A Scoping Review to Inform Future Research and Policy Needs
Authors: J Nikolaus, Cassandra
Johnson, Selisha
Benally, Tia
Maudrie, Tara
Henderson, Austin
Nelson, Katie
Lane, Trevor
Segrest, Valerie
L Ferguson, Gary
Buchwald, Dedra
Bird Jernigan, Valarie Blue
Sinclair, Ka`imi
Keywords: Native American,
Indigenous
, literature review,
nutrition,
food access,
food sovereignty
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society for Nutrition 2022
Abstract: Food insecurity, defined as insufficient access to nutritious foods, is a social determinant of health that may underpin health disparities in the US. American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) individuals experience many health inequities that may be related to food insecurity, but no systematic analyses of the existing evidence have been published. Thus, the objective of this scoping review was to assess the literature on food insecurity among AI/AN individuals and communities, with a focus on the prevalence of food insecurity and its relations to sociodemographic, nutrition, and health characteristics. Systematic search and data extraction processes were used. Searches were conducted on PubMed as well as peerreviewed journal and government websites. Of 3174 identified references, 34 publications describing 30 studies with predominantly AI/AN sample populations were included in the final narrative synthesis. Twenty-two studies (73%) were cross-sectional and the remaining 8 (27%) described interventions. The weighted average prevalence of food insecurity across the studies was 45.7%, although estimates varied from 16% to 80%. Most studies used some version of the USDA Food Security Survey Modules, although evidence supporting its validity in AI/AN respondents is limited. Based on the review, recommendations for future research were derived, which include fundamental validity testing, better representation of AI/AN individuals in federal or local food security reports, and consideration of cultural contexts when selecting methodological approaches. Advances in AI/AN food insecurity research could yield tangible benefits to ongoing initiatives aimed at increasing access to traditional foods, improving food environments on reservations and homelands, and supporting food sovereignty
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5201
Appears in Collections:VOL 13 NO 5 2022

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