Litcius/Paper detail

Poverty and food insecurity may increase as the threat of COVID-19 spreads

Marcos Pereira, Ana Marlúcia Oliveira

2020Public Health Nutrition310 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article discusses the relationship between both poverty and food insecurity (FI) and the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as presenting possible strategies and actions for increasing social protection in the fight against these conditions in the current epidemiological context, especially for low-income countries. This is a narrative review concerning COVID-19, poverty, and food and nutritional insecurity. The COVID-19 pandemic may increase poverty and FI levels, resulting from the absence of or weak political, economic and social interventions to maintain jobs, as well as compromised food production and distribution chains and reduced access to healthy foods in different countries around the world, especially the poorest ones, where social and economic inequality was already historically high; the pandemic heightens and uncovers the vulnerability of poor populations. Public policies focused on guaranteeing the human right to adequate food must be improved and implemented for populations in contexts of poverty with the aim of providing food security.

Topics & Concepts

PovertyVulnerability (computing)Food securityDevelopment economicsPandemicContext (archaeology)Social protectionCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Psychological interventionEconomic growthInequalitySocial inequalityEconomic inequalityPolitical scienceEconomicsGeographyPsychologyMedicineAgricultureArchaeologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyComputer scienceMathematicsPsychiatryDiseaseComputer securityMathematical analysisFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsChild Nutrition and Water AccessIncome, Poverty, and Inequality