Yorkshire Post

Rise in hard-up families skipping meals

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AROUND one in seven adults live in homes where people have skipped meals, eaten smaller portions or gone hungry all day because they could not afford or access food, research suggests.

The number of people struggling to buy food has risen by 57 per cent in three months, according to research by the Food Foundation.

The charity said food bank users are increasing­ly requesting items that do not need cooking because they are worried about how they will afford rising energy bills.

The “chilling” figures come at a time when the cost-of-living crisis is increasing­ly hitting families who are facing rising utility and food prices, which are outstrippi­ng the amount by which benefits have risen.

The Food Foundation analysed responses from 10,674 UK adults who were surveyed online by YouGov between April 22 and 29.

Some 13.8 per cent said they or a member of their household had either eaten smaller meals than usual or skipped meals, not eaten despite being hungry, or not eaten for a full day because they could not afford or get access to food in the past month.

Extrapolat­ed to UK population level, the findings suggest around 7.3 million adults live in households affected by food insecurity, including 2.6 million children.

This is up from 4.7 million adults surveyed in January (8.8 per cent of respondent­s).

The research shows half of households on Universal Credit have been food insecure in the past six months. Anna Taylor, of the Food Foundation, said the “extremely rapid rise” could be catastroph­ic for families.

“The situation is rapidly turning from an economic crisis to a health crisis. Food banks cannot possibly be expected to solve this,” she added.

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