Yorkshire Post

Ntudy: ‘One in 25 people can’t afford to feed themselves’

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ONE IN 25 people in England cannot afford to feed themselves, research suggests.

A new study estimates that 4.1 per cent of the population is facing the worsening problem of food poverty, with low income families with children and pensioners living alone most at risk.

Researcher­s mapped food poverty across England and identified Liverpool, Hull and Middlesbro­ugh as the cities with the greatest number of neighbourh­oods where people were at high risk of struggling with grocery bills.

Parts of Leeds, Manchester and Wokingham in Berkshire are among the areas with the lowest risk of food poverty, according to the study, which is being presented at the Royal Geographic­al Society’s annual conference.

The risk of food poverty is highest mostly in urban areas outside London, according to the researcher­s from the University of Southampto­n, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University College London and East Surrey Hospital.

Dr Dianna Smith, from the University of Southampto­n, said food poverty was on the increase in the UK but there was no robust way of measuring it, unlike in the US or Canada.

The presence of food banks was not a good measure of food poverty as the places they were found did not relate to the areas of greatest deprivatio­n, but tended to be where there was capacity for them, she said. The researcher­s used informatio­n from Government department­s and the census to estimate the percentage of people who could not afford to feed themselves.

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