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Food insecurity in Australia: Implications for general practitioners

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journal contribution
posted on 2015-11-02, 00:00 authored by Rebecca LindbergRebecca Lindberg, Mark LawrenceMark Lawrence, Lisa GoldLisa Gold, S Friel, O Pegram
Background In Australia, it would appear that food is abundant. For a proportion of people, however, accessing enough food to eat can be a daily or weekly struggle.
Objectives This article provides a summary about the prevalence, causes and consequences of food insecurity that affects vulnerable populations in Australia, and discusses the implications for general practitioners (GPs).
Discussion It is estimated that 4% of Australians cannot access sufficient, safe and nutritious food. Food insecurity can be both a precursor to, and a by-product of, chronic disease and poverty. Patients who are food insecure may skip meals, eat cheap food and experience stress. They may show incredible resilience and skills in managing and masking this issue. Identifying this vulnerable population is of high importance to GPs as it has an impact on the work-up and care of such individuals. Effective links between welfare and health services are required to address patients’ material, financial and environmental barriers to food security

History

Journal

Australian Family Physician

Volume

44

Issue

11

Pagination

861 - 862

Publisher

Royal Australian College of General

Location

South Melbourne, Vic

ISSN

0300-8495

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Royal Australian College of General

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