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Journal of Human Growth and Development

versão impressa ISSN 0104-1282versão On-line ISSN 2175-3598

J. Hum. Growth Dev. vol.26 no.3 São Paulo  2016

http://dx.doi.org/10.7322/jhgd.122761 

ORIGINAL RESEARCH
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.7322/jhgd.122761

 

Food insecurity in families with children under five years of age on the Brazil-Peru Amazon border

 

 

Alanderson Alves RamalhoI; Saulo Augusto Silva MantovaniI; Humberto Oliart-GuzmánI; Fernando Luiz Cunha Castelo BrancoI; Athos Muniz BrañaI; Antonio Camargo MartinsI; Thasciany Moraes PereiraI; Breno Matos DelfinoI; José Alcântara Filgueira JúniorI; Carlos Hermogenes Manrique de Lara EstradaII; Nancy Arrospide VelascoIII; Monica da Silva-NunesI

IUniversidade Federal do Acre
IIDirección Regional de Salud de Madre de Dios
IIIInstituto Nacional de Salud, Perú

 

 


ABSTRACT

Food and nutrition security is the regular and permanent access to quality food in sufficient quantity. The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence and factors associated with food insecurity in households with children under five in the Amazon frontier Brazil - Peru. The study was conducted in 352 households in Assis Brasil (Brazil) and 89 households Iñapari (Peru), finding a prevalence of food insecurity of 40.6 % and 38.2 % , respectively ( p = 0.856 ) . In Assis Brasil, having domicile with wood floors or land increased by 2.47 times the odds of food insecurity compared to cement floors, ceramic or quarry tiles . Belonging to the poorest tertile increased the chance of food insecurity in 6.04 times ( p < 0.001 ), and the increment of each new resident increased by 37 % the chance of food insecurity in the household . In Iñapari, only living in house made of wood or with a wood floor was associated with food insecurity, showing that income is still the main factor associated with food insecurity in the Amazonian borders.

Keywords: food security, border health, hunger.


 

 

INTRODUCTION

Food and nutritional security consists in ensuring the right for all to regular and permanent access to quality food in sufficient amounts without compromising access to other essential needs, based on dietary practices that can promote health and respect cultural diversity and that are environmentally, culturally, economically and socially sustainable1.

The major international measure to achieve food security is based on the first of the Millennium Development Goals (Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger)2, concomitantly with the human right to a proper diet. It is estimated that 1 billion people worldwide do not have access to sufficient food in order to meet basic nutritional requirements or live in a condition of continual hunger, which indicates moderate and severe food insecurity3.

The National Survey by Household Sampling (Pesquisa Nacional por Amostragem de Domicílios - PNAD), conducted in 2009, estimated that the prevalence of food insecurity in urban areas in Brazil was 30.9% and that severe food insecurity was 5.0%. The largest prevalence rates were found in the Northeastern (46.1%) and Northern (40.3%) Regions. In Acre, 47.5% of the families residing in urban areas lived in food insecurity, and 10.4% were found to be in a severe condition4.

Food insecurity is mainly determined by poverty and social inequality5. Studies that analyze factors associated with food insecurity are decisive for designing programs and public policies of preventive character and for health promotion6.

The outcomes of food insecurity can be observed mainly in the most vulnerable groups. Child mortality, impaired physical and mental development, low weight at birth, maternal mortality, increased school dropout and poorer school performance are events related to the lack of a healthy quality diet as a consequence of precarious access to income and to goods and services7. For instance, low birth at weight is still a common feature in Acre8, while low weight for height in school children is not frequent9. This could be a consequence of maternal exposition to food insecurity during pregnancy, which is modified later by food received at school. Various international studies have reported a direct relationship of food insecurity with an impaired nutritional status in children10-13, and nutritional deficits are still a common feature in Brazilian children less than five years old14, suggesting a high prevalence of food insecurity in some areas of the country.

Although some studies have been performed on food insecurity in the general population in the Amazon15,16, there are no specific publications addressing the situation of children in that region. The Amazon has a large diversity of fish and fruit, which should represent an abundant supply of energy, protein, vitamins and minerals, thus providing excellent health, nutrition and life-quality standards to its different population groups17. However, the social and economic reality added to the precarious health and nutritional conditions reported in that region strongly contrast with its richness of biological resources.17 This study aimed at estimating the prevalence of and the factors associated with food insecurity in families with children under five years of age on the Brazil-Peru Amazon border.

 

METHODS

The study was conducted in the cities of Assis Brasil (Brazil) and Iñapari (Peru), located on the triple border formed by Brazil, Bolivia and Peru. Assis Brasil is located on the Acre River Valley (Vale do Rio Acre), 344 miles to the Southwest of Rio Branco, the capital city of Acre state. It covers an area of 4,974 km2, and it is bordered by the city of Brasiléia, to the East, and by the cities of Bolpebra (Bolivia) and Iñapari (Peru), to the South. In 2010, Assis Brasil had a total population of (urban and rural areas) of 6,017 inhabitants (3,057 men and 2,960 women) of whom 12.76% were 0 to 4 years old18.

The city of Iñapari, with 21,126 km2, is located in the department of Madre de Dios, in the Amazon province of Tahuamanu. It is limited by the Acre River, on the border with Brazil, and the Yaverija River, on the border with Bolivia, thus being 241 km away from Puerto Maldonado. In 2007, its population comprised 996 individuals19, and the population forecast for 2010 was of 1,434 people20.

The population studied was selected from the census of households showing at least one child under 5 years of age, residing in the urban areas in the cities of Assis Brasil and Iñapari. Such households were found by using the Health Care Units of both cities.

Data were collected from January to February 2011 by means of interviews using questionnaires in order to investigate the children's socioeconomic, environmental and parental characteristics as well as their nutritional status.

Data concerning the family and family head's income were collected. However, that information was inadequate for analysis due to various reasons (inconsistent income due to temporary jobs, refusal to inform about income or lack of knowledge about the income of all family members or about income in the form of goods instead of money). Therefore, the researchers opted for designing a wealth index for the families, as those validated by Filmer and Pritchett for urban areas21, which was described in detail in a previous study22.

Digital pediatric scales (Soehnle®) with 10-g precision and 16-kg maximum capacity were used to measure the body weight of children under 2 years of age. A portable digital scale (Plenna®) with 100-g precision and 150-kg maximum capacity was used for children over two years of age. The children's length was obtained by using a portable infantometer with 1-cm precision placed on a flat surface. The height of children over 2 years of age was measured by a wooden stadiometer with 0.1-cm precision mounted on a wall without baseboards at a 90° degree angle in relation to the floor. All the anthropometric measurements were taken in duplicates. Whenever the two measurements differed, a third one was taken, and the two closest measurements were selected.

The Brazilian Food Insecurity Scale (Escala Brasileira de Insegurança Alimentar - EBIA) was adopted to measure the magnitude of family food insecurity. It was obtained by means of a structured questionnaire whose questions followed an increasing order of severity, beginning with those related to the concern about the possibility of lack of food, addressing the reduction in food quality and quantity in the family and finalizing with specific questions about the lack of food for one or more days23. Studies in Peru usually use the Latin American and Caribbean Food Security Scale (ELCSA). ELCSA was based on EBIA, and they are both very similar24. Since the objective was to compare both cities EBIA was used in both countries.

Statistical analysis

The socioeconomic index was obtained by Principal Component Analysis (PCA), using software XLSTAT, version 7.5.2 (Addinsoft, New York, NY, covariance parameters (n -1) and correlation biplot / coefficient = n, as described by Filmer and Pritchett21. Such index was created based on the presence of twenty-one consumer goods and house appliances (television, music system, DVD player, gas stove, refrigerator, washing machine, telephone, bicycle, blender, electric iron, car, sofa, satellite dish, cellular telephone, motorcycle, computer, boat, motor boat, water well, power generator and microwave oven), as described in a previous publication22.

Height deficit was identified by the index height for age by adopting the cutoff point for height deficit for age -2 scores Z25.

In order to analyze the food insecurity questionnaire, each affirmative answer represented 1 point, and the sum of such affirmative answers was the scale score, which ranged in the amplitude of 0 to 15 points. The families obtaining 0 points were considered to be in food security; slight insecurity from 1 to 5 points; moderate insecurity from 6 to 10 points and severe insecurity from 11 to 15 points.

A database was created in software SPSS 13.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL). The distribution of independent variables was identified by using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. Software R 2.14.0 was used for simple logistic regression analysis by analyzing the associated factors and potential confusion factors, including categorical and continuous variables.

Initially, the independent variables showing associations with food insecurity with a p value < 0.20 (chi-square test for heterogeneity and of linear tendency) were selected to enter the final multiple model. In a second phase, multiple logistic regression was performed according to the stepwise forward method, and all the variables showing a p value < 0.05 were retained in the final model. The quality of fitting of the model was evaluated by the variance value, AIC (Akaike's Information Criterion) values.

The study was approved by the Ethics Committee for Human Research of Acre Federal University (Brazil) and of Instituto Nacional de Salud (Lima, Peru), processes 23107.008153/2010-92 UFAC and 2010-CI-59 - INS). Informed consent was obtained from the participants in the study or from the parents or legal guardians of the minors prior to the interview.

 

RESULT

Of the 441 households with children under 5 years of age identified, 352 (79.82%) were located in Assis Brasil, and the others in Iñapari.

Table 1 shows the comparison of the socioeconomic and demographic characteristics between the families in Assis Brasil (AB) and Iñapari (IN). In both cities, the houses are predominantly made of wood or similar materials, with wooden or earthen floors. The majority of streets are unpaved; however, in Iñapari, there are more sidewalks (47.2%) than in Assis Brasil (24.4%, p < 0.001).

Sanitary conditions are more favorable in Assis Brasil, where there is a predominance of garbage collection by public and sanitary services. The households have running water systems. Nevertheless, open sewers are more frequently found in that city (39.5%) than in Iñapari (23.6%, p = 0.005).

As regards economic characteristics, they seem to be more favorable Iñapari, where there is a predominance of family incomes that are higher than minimum wages and where heads of families more often have remunerated jobs. However, the number of families on social welfare and who do not own their own homes is also larger. The education of younger-than-five-year-old children's main care providers was better in Iñapari, as 70.5% of such carers reported to have attended school for 8 years or longer (AB: 48.3%, p < 0.001). The mean prevalence of height deficit for age in children was 12.3%, and there were no significant statistical differences between the two cities (AB: 15.5%; IN: 9.1%, p = 0.124).

The prevalence of food insecurity in the cities was similar (Table 2). Assis Brasil showed 40.6% and Iñapari 38.2% (p = 0.856). When it was stratified by type, Assis Brasil sho wed 24.1% of slight food insecurity and 16.5% of moderate and severe food insecurity.

In Assis Brasil, socioeconomic and demographic characteristics varied according to the level of food security (Table 3). In the households showing severe and moderate food insecurity, unfavorable housing, sanitation and income conditions predominated, such as: wooden or earthen floors, unpaved streets without sidewalks, family income equal to or lower than minimum wages, among others. On the other hand, slightly more favorable conditions predominated in the households showing food security, such as brick houses with running waters systems and income equal to or higher than minimum wages. The households classified as being in mild insecurity showed similar physical housing conditions to those in moderate and severe insecurity, while sanitation conditions and income indicators showed to be intermediate between the households with food security and insecurity (Table 3).

In Iñapari, the households showed different physical characteristics according to the food security situation. Wooden houses with earthen floors were more frequent for households classified as being in food insecurity (Table 4).

The factors associated with food insecurity in the city of Assis Brasil, as obtained by multiple logistic regression, were wooden or earthen house floors, belonging to the poorest tercile and the number of household members (Table 5). Having a house with wooden or earthen floors increased the chances of being in food insecurity by 2.47-fold as compared to having a house with cement, brick, ceramics or tile floors. Belonging to the poorest tercile increased the chance of food insecurity by 6.04 - fold (p < 0.001), and the addition of each new dweller increased the chance of food insecurity in the household by 37%.

 

DISCUSSION

The Brazil-Peru-Bolivia border region is formed by different nationalities, ethnicities and cultures that participate in the intense movements of people circulation in the region. The physical location poses similar challenges to both cities (Assis Brasil and Iñapari), while the cultural habits and economy of each country may be modifying factors of life conditions.

Socioeconomic and sanitation conditions in Assis Brasil and Iñapari show similarities and differences. The physical characteristics of the households are similar, considering that they are located in the Amazon region, and the availability and cost of construction materials are similar. The number of households with electric power supply and public garbage collection is also similar, thus showing that the Amazon region has already managed to create the necessary conditions for public services and electric power distribution in its realms, although, in Iñapari electric power is supplied only during part of the day; income and sanitation conditions, one the other hand, are very different in the two cities. Family income, employment rates, maternal education and sanitation conditions provided by public authorities (more sidewalks and fewer open sewers) are better in Iñapari, but individual sanitation conditions are improved in Assis Brasil (more houses with toilets with running water). On the other hand, the number of households with running water inside is similar. Considering these results, we can state that some socio-environmental characteristics are due to the geographic location (a remote region of the Amazon), while others probably result from the very cultural conditions of each country (for instance, a larger number of cesspools in the city where family income is higher).

Studies on other border areas with these characteristics, such as the Argentina-Brazil-Paraguay Triple Frontier, have pointed out various social and health problems that are common to the three border countries, such as the binomial malnutrition/overweight, child sexual exploitation, drug trafficking and respiratory diseases26,27. Food security is related to the estimation of food availability, in terms of quantity and quality. The Amazon region has peculiarities as regards the supply of food and its variability. Beef and lamb production entails deforestation; game meat, although abundant, cannot be consumed. The Amazon soil and climate are improper for various cultures, which causes the demand for foodstuffs importation to be large. On the other hand the logistics for nonperishable food distribution is complex and results in high cost to consumers while perishable food is difficult to distribute before it becomes improper for consumption. Even the supply of regional edible fruit is heterogeneous within the Amazon, and such difficulties can equally affect both cities due to their geographic location. However, food from the Andes, such as grapes, plums and tuna as well as tubers and grains can reach Iñapari, but, although it would favor a larger variability of foodstuffs, the same does not happen in Assis Brasil due to international restrictions. Despite this fact, the prevalence of food insecurity found in this study between Assis Brasil and Iñapari was similar, thus showing that both border cities are susceptible to the same determinant factors for food insecurity. Therefore, it is a problem that is common to the two countries.

The prevalence of food insecurity found by our study in Assis Brasil is lower than the average in Acre state (47.5%); however, it must be taken into account that PNAD joins results from urban and rural areas, in addition to gathering data from the capital with data from isolated cities from inner Acre state, the access to which is only by inland waterways or air. In these remote areas of the state are cities with the highest prevalence of malnutrition in Brazil28, which is probably the reason why the mean prevalence of food insecurity in Acre is larger than that in the Northern Region as well as than the national average. Additionally, our study involves only families that have children under 5 years of age while PNAD samples all households.

There are few data available concerning estimates of food insecurity in the Amazon region. A study on 194 families from the urban area of Manaus estimated that the prevalence of food insecurity affected 89.1% of families15. In the Legal Amazon in Mato Grosso state - Brazil, a study on households with adolescents in the urban area estimated the prevalence of moderate and severe food insecurity as 23,1%16.

The estimates by PNAD for the Northern and Northeaster Regions were 3.1 and 3.5-fold higher than that for the Southern Region29. In agreement with that report, a recent study conducted in Pelotas (RS) estimated the prevalence of food insecurity as 11%30.

In Peru, there is only one published study on food security to this date. Vargas and Penny31 estimated the prevalence of food insecurity in three regions in Peru (the seacoast, Andes and Amazon regions) in 2002. The San Martin Region (Peruvian Amazon) showed the highest prevalence (56%), and the Andes Region showed the lowest prevalence of food insecurity (51%). Although the collection instrument was different from that used in our study, the prevalence of food insecurity in Iñapari was lower than that found by Vargas and Penny31. A real decrease in food insecurity may have occurred in the Peruvian Amazon between 2002 and 2011, considering that the same occurred in the Brazilian Amazon (58.9% of food insecurity in Acre by the 2004 PNAD to 47.5% by the 2009 PNAD)4. Another explanation for the difference found is due to the fact that our study included only families from the urban area that had children under 5 years of age.

The main causes for food insecurity in Iñapari and Assis Brasil refer to unfavorable socioeconomic conditions (low income, large number of dwellers and households that are not made of bricks). These data are confirmed by other studies30,32,33 that also identified an association of a large number of dwellers in the household(32), houses made of wood30 and low family income34,35 with higher food insecurity prevalence. In addition to these variables, deficient basic sanitation33,36 and the poor education of the reference person in the family32,36 were also more frequent in families living in food insecurity.

In this investigation, almost half of the families in Assis Brasil reported a monthly income that was lower than or equal to minimum wages. According to the Family Budget Survey (Pesquisa de Orçamento Familiar - POF 2008-2009)37 total income is one of the main determinants in the construction of the family budget: the lowest the family's monthly income, the largest the proportion of households in a situation of moderate or severe food insecurity4.

 

CONCLUSION

This study shows that, in the Amazon Region, income is still the main factor associated with food insecurity. Considering that the food available in the Amazon retail shops is more expensive than in the other regions in Brazil, it is important that studies on the edible potential of regional fruit and fish and new technologies for using them be performed in order to promote food security.

 

CONTRIBUTIONS

AAR, NAV, CHMLE and MdaSN conceived the study and developed the study protocol; TMP, FLCCB, HOG, BMD, AMB, ACM, JAFJ, APS, RGC, ASG, TSA, CSMO, MdaSN, AAR, NAV and CHMLE participated in the process for selecting the research instrument and the sampling strategy, in addition to performing data collection; SASM, AAR, and MdaSN analyzed and interpreted the data. AAR and MdaSN wrote the manuscript. All the other authors participated in the critical review of the manuscript and contributed to the discussion of results and to the review of the intellectual content in the research. A8l the authors read and approved the final version of the manuscript.

 

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Manuscript submitted 27 Feb. 2015
Accepted for publication 8 Oct. 2016

 

 

Corresponding author: Monica da Silva-Nunes. E-mail: msnunes1@yahoo.com.br

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