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Health
Consequences of Hunger
(from Food Research Action Center)
Hunger and undernutrition contribute to a number of negative health
consequences:
Health Consequences of Hunger (from FRAC)
Hunger
and undernutrition contribute to a number of negative health consequences:
A joint analysis released by the Center on Hunger and Poverty at
Brandeis University and the Food Research and Action Center (FRAC)
shows how hunger and obesity not only pose separate and distinct
health risks, but also can co-exist in the same household.
According
to FRAC's survey of families living below 185 percent of poverty
-- the Community Childhood Hunger Identification Project (CCHIP)
-- hungry children suffer from two to four times as many individual
health problems, such as unwanted weight loss, fatigue, headaches,
irritability, inability to concentrate and frequent colds, as low-income
children whose families do not experience food shortages. This relationship
between hunger and health problems was unaffected by income. In
other words, hunger had a strong effect on children's health no
matter what the income level of their families.
According
to CCHIP, hungry children are more likely to be ill and absent from
school.
The infant mortality rate is closely linked to inadequate quantity
or quality in the diet of the infant's mother. In 1996, the infant
mortality rate in the United States was 7.3 deaths per 1,000 live
births. Black infants in the U.S. died at more than twice the rate
of white infants, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.
Stunting
(low height for age) in children results from inadequate nutrition.
According to the U.S. Public Health Service, the Surgeon General's
1990 goal of eliminating growth retardation of infants and children
caused by inadequate diets was not met because significant numbers
of low-income children continued to suffer retarded growth. In 1992,
almost twice as many low-income children as would be expected were
short for their age.
Iron-deficiency
anemia in children can lead to adverse health effects such as developmental
and behavioral disturbances that can affect children's ability to
learn to read or do mathematics, and increased susceptibility to
lead poisoning. Anemia remains a significant health problem among
low-income children, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
Pregnant
women who are undernourished are more likely to have low-birthweight
babies. These infants are more likely to suffer delays in their
development and are more likely to have behavior and learning problems
later in life.
Hungry
children are less likely to interact with other people or explore
or learn from their surroundings. This interferes with their ability
to learn from a very early age.
Hunger
has a negative impact on children's ability to learn in school.
School-aged children who are hungry cannot concentrate or do as
well as others on the tasks they need to perform to learn the basics.
Research indicates that low-income children who participate in the
School Breakfast Program show an improvement in standardized test
scores and a decrease in tardiness and absenteeism compared to low-income
students who do not eat breakfast at school.
According
to the Tufts University Center on Hunger, Poverty and Nutrition
Policy, evidence from recent research about child nutrition shows
that, in addition to having a detrimental effect on the cognitive
development of children, undernutrition results in lost knowledge,
brainpower, and productivity for the nation.
Hunger
and malnutrition exacerbate chronic and acute diseases and speed
the onset of degenerative diseases among the elderly. This not only
leads to an unnecessary decrease in the quality of life for many
older people, but also increases the cost of health care in the
United States. National data for people ages 65 to 75 show that
a majority are not consuming even two-thirds of the nutrients they
need to stay healthy.
Hunger,
and insecurity about whether a family will be able to obtain enough
food to avoid hunger, also have an emotional impact on children
and their parents. Anxiety, negative feelings about self-worth,
and hostility towards the outside world can result from chronic
hunger and food insecurity.
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