Abstract

The burden of food insecurity and malnutrition is a severe problem experienced by many poor households and children under the age of five are at high risk. The objective of the study was to examine household food insecurity, dietary diversity, and child nutritional status in relation to local context which influences access to and ability to grow food in South Africa and explore the links and associations between these and household socio-economic status. Using a 48-h dietary recall method, we interviewed 554 women from randomly selected households along a rural–urban continuum in three towns situated along an agro-ecological gradient. The Household Dietary Diversity Scores (HDDS) and the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (HFIAS) tools were used to measure household dietary diversity and food insecurity, respectively. Anthropometric measurements with 216 children (2–5 years) from the sampled households were conducted using height-for-age and mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) as indicators of stunting and wasting, respectively. The key findings were that mean HDDS declined with decreasing agro-ecological potential from the wettest site (8.44 ± 1.72) to the other two drier sites (7.83 ± 1.59 and 7.76 ± 1.63). The mean HFIAS followed the opposite trend. Stunted growth was the dominant form of malnutrition detected in 35% of children and 18% of children were wasted. Child wasting was greatest at the site with lowest agro-ecological potential. Children from households with low HDDS had large MUAC which showed an inverse association among HDDS and obesity. Areas with agro-ecological potential had lower prevalence of food insecurity and wasting in children. Agro-ecological potential has significant influence on children’s nutritional status, which is also related to household food security and socio-economic status. Dependence on food purchasing and any limitations in households’ income, access to land and food, can result in different forms of malnutrition in children. Responses to address malnutrition in South Africa need to be prioritized and move beyond relying on food security and nutritional-specific interventions, but rather on nutrition-specific and sensitive programs and approaches; and building an enabling environment. Land availability, agriculture (including climate-smart agriculture especially in drier areas), and wild foods usage should be promoted.

Highlights

  • Nutritional status is considered a key indicator of national development, because a well-nourished and healthy population is essential for successful economic and social development

  • The use of dietary diversity as an indicator of dietary quality is widespread in food security studies at both individual and household levels

  • The prevalence of food insecurity was highest in peri-urban and rural locations following Shisana et al [38] Rose and Charlton [57] found the greatest percentages of food insecurity in rural households

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Summary

Introduction

Nutritional status is considered a key indicator of national development, because a well-nourished and healthy population is essential for successful economic and social development. Many low-income households consume monotonous diets which are of low quality, cereal based, and lack diversity, thereby increasing the risk of micronutrient deficiencies which is already high in these resource-poor settings [2, 3]. It is important to have better understanding of the effects of food insecurity on vulnerable groups in societies, especially the poor, women of reproductive age, and children under the age of five as they are at high risk [4,5,6,7]. Household food insecurity is one determinant of nutritional status of children especially in developing countries [8, 9] as it directly affects the quantity and quality of dietary intake [5, 6, 10]. Food-insecure households in Columbia and Pakistan had greater probability of having stunted [11, 12] and underweight child [12]

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