Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Experts: Hunger inflames anxiety

- By Fred Miller

Families worried about having enough food during the covid-19 pandemic are at three times the risk of experienci­ng anxiety or depression as those that have lost jobs, according to research by three Arkansas agricultur­al economists.

“Our results suggest that covid relief should place more focus on food assistance,” said Michael Thomsen, professor in the department of agricultur­al economics and agribusine­ss for the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station and the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultur­al, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas.

The experiment station is the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e.

Thomsen and his collaborat­ors, Di Fang, assistant professor of agricultur­al economics and agribusine­ss in Bumpers College, and Rudy Nayga, distinguis­hed professor and holder of the Tyson chair in food policy economics for the Agricultur­al Experiment Station and Bumpers College, conducted a survey of low-income Americans during the pandemic.

Fang said 28% of low-income families were food insecure before the pandemic. Families with female heads of house were a disproport­ionate percentage of those.

Stay-at-home restrictio­ns and the closing of grocery stores and restaurant­s during the covid-19 pandemic compounded worries about having enough food.

Low-income families have been particular­ly vulnerable to food insecurity and its contributi­on to mental health problems during the pandemic, Nayga said. Low-income families often live in “food deserts,” areas with few outlets for fresh foods.

This requires longer trips to supermarke­ts and greater reliance on public transporta­tion, much of which was shut down or operating on reduced schedules during the shutdown.

Also, children of low-income families often rely on school breakfast and lunch programs. The closing of in-person classes during the pandemic meant that many of those food programs were not available.

“Covid is not just a health crisis,” Fang said. “It’s also a hunger crisis.”

Nayga noted that the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) expansion as part of the U.S. government’s covid-19 relief efforts only helped families that were not already receiving the maximum benefits allowed by the program. Those families whose low incomes already made them eligible for the maximum benefits did not receive increased assistance.

“The SNAP expansion for covid didn’t help the poorest of the poor,” Thomsen said.

Overall, Fang said, “If you’re food insecure — if you are worried about having enough food during the pandemic — you are at three times the risk of experienci­ng anxiety or depression than someone who lost their job during the pandemic.”

The risks for mental health problems cut across all races among low-income families, Fang said. The risk is greater for the elderly and families with children.

Thomsen said the survey results suggest that financial aid during the pandemic, while helpful, had relatively little effect on mental health concerns caused by food insecurity.

“Covid relief should place more focus on food assistance,” he said.

Food assistance can also help give a boost to the economy, Thomsen said.

“There’s evidence that increases in SNAP benefits lead to more money being spent on food than direct money payments,” he said.

Fang added that the implicatio­ns of their research “suggest that more public health measures for the pandemic should focus on getting direct subsidies of food purchases to poor families, especially families with children, as well as removing the barriers to accessing charitable food sources.”

They had more than 2,700 responses to the survey. Their research paper on the topic is available online: http://bit.ly/COVIDFoodH­ealth.

To learn more about Division of Agricultur­e research, visit the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uark.edu or follow the agency on Twitter at @ArkAgResea­rch.

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