Infectious diseases, unintentional injuries, and suicide are twice as likely to kill those who face severe problems finding enough food as those who do not
By Thin Lei Win
ROME (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Canadians who cannot afford regular meals are more likely to die early, according to a study released on Monday, showing that people are dying from hunger even in wealthy countries.
The study of more than half a million Canadian adults found that hunger was linked to raised mortality from all causes of death except cancer.
But infectious diseases, unintentional injuries and suicide were twice as likely to kill those who faced severe problems finding enough food as those who do not, said the paper, published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
“It’s like we found third-world causes in a first-world country,” lead author Fei Men, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Toronto, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
“Food insecure people in Canada are facing problems like infections and drug poisoning that we would expect people from developing countries to be facing,” he said.
“The results are pretty striking to us as well. In the developed world such as Canada, food insecurity can still cause deaths,” Men added.
More than 4 million people in Canada struggle to get enough to eat, official data show, a problem that ranges from running out of food or skipping meals to compromising on quantity and quality.
Not having enough to eat leads to both “material deprivation and psychological distress” which in turn results in chronic inflammation and malnutrition, it said.
They are also less able to manage chronic conditions, Men said in a phone interview.
“(If they have) diabetes, they are more likely to not adhere to their treatment and drugs so it might have much bigger and harmful effect on them.”
A 2019 study looking at the relationship between hunger and mortality among U.S. adults also found similar that not having enough food was linked to deaths from all causes.
Globally, more than 2 billion people lack access to adequate healthy food, putting them at risk of health problems, including 8% of people in North America or Europe, according to the latest data from the United Nations.
Researchers in the Canada study looked at data on more than half a million adults, of whom more than 25,000 died before the average age of 82.
The findings show public health efforts to prevent and treat diseases and injuries should take into account people’s access to adequate food, the authors said.
(Reporting By Thin Lei Win @thinink, Editing by Claire Cozens. Credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation)