Sunday, December 7, 2025
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Food scarcity linked to mental health

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Dec, 2020 08:05 PM
  • Food scarcity linked to mental health

A new report from Statistics Canada suggests Canadians who dealt with food insecurity during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic this spring were more likely to perceive their mental health as poor and report anxiety symptoms than those who did not.

The agency says 14.6 per cent of respondents to a survey conducted in May reported experiencing food insecurity within the previous 30 days. One in five Canadians who took part in the survey also perceived their mental health as fair or poor, or reported moderate or severe anxiety symptoms.

The agency found that the prevalence of fair or poor self-perceived levels of mental health and moderate or severe symptoms of anxiety was much higher for those dealing with inadequate access to food in their households.

It says those experiencing some level of food insecurity were more likely to be male, younger and single, or more likely to live in a larger household or a home with children, and to be unemployed or to have experienced a financial impact from COVID-19.

Statistics Canada says this study is the first to examine the association between household food insecurity and self-perceived mental health and anxiety symptoms among Canadians during COVID-19 pandemic.

Photo courtesy of Istock. 

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Age doesn't diminish ability to take financial decisions

Age doesn't diminish ability to take financial decisions
Getting old does not spell doom when it comes to taking key financial decisions, says a team of researchers led by the University of California (UC), Riverside....

Age doesn't diminish ability to take financial decisions

House not clean as we think: Study

House not clean as we think: Study
Most people pride themselves on trying to keep their house clean and tidy. But a new research suggests our houses are not as tidy as we think....

House not clean as we think: Study

Chocolates keep you healthy, happy

Chocolates keep you healthy, happy
It's a well known fact that too much consumption of sugar is bad for health. But a little bit of sugar in moderation isn't as terrible as one thought, say researchers....

Chocolates keep you healthy, happy

Workers sacrificing sleep for long hours: Study

Workers sacrificing sleep for long hours: Study
A study has suggested that people are exchanging paid work with their sleeping time and a chronic sleep loss can be prevented with flexible working hours....

Workers sacrificing sleep for long hours: Study

'Increase in mindfulness will not make you slim'

'Increase in mindfulness will not make you slim'
Contrary to popular perception, increase in mindfulness - monitoring food intake, increasing physical activity and avoiding stress eating - may...

'Increase in mindfulness will not make you slim'

College students unaware about hookah risks: Study

College students unaware about hookah risks: Study
College students consider hookah smoking safer than smoking cigarettes as they lack awareness about the risks associated with the former, says a US-based study....

College students unaware about hookah risks: Study