Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T20:19:51.000Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Food insecurity in children and young people in Scotland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2024

Stephanie Chambers*
Affiliation:
School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow, 28 Bute Gardens, Glasgow G12 8RS, Scotland MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, School of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland
Kathryn Machray
Affiliation:
MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, School of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland
Gillian Fergie
Affiliation:
MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, School of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland
*
*Corresponding author: Stephanie Chambers, email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The aim of this review is to highlight the key issues in relation to food insecurity among children and young people living in Scotland. It provides an overview of the current context of food insecurity more generally within the UK and specifically in Scotland. Food insecurity has risen in Scotland evidenced through responses to national surveys and the dramatic increase in households relying on emergency food provision. Food insecurity is highest among young people, single parent families and single men. The key drivers of food insecurity include insufficient income, welfare reform, food inflation and geo-political events. Evidence suggests that food insecurity is negatively related to sufficient nutritional intake, and the implications for physical and mental health are profound. Policy actions implemented to mitigate the impact of food insecurity on children and young people include the introduction of the Scottish Child Payment, food voucher schemes, free school meals, and holiday food provision. Further evidence is required to evaluate the success of these policies in reducing or mitigating food insecurity. The review concludes by considering the ways in which a rights-based approach to food might benefit children and young people living in Scotland, and argues that wider systemic change is required.

Type
Conference on ‘Diet and Health Inequalities’
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Nutrition Society

Food insecurity - the ‘limited access to food … due to lack of money or other resources(1)’ has risen dramatically across the UK, and particularly in Scotland(Reference Scott24). Food insecurity can occur at the national level from external shocks or other structural issues impacting on the food system, but also within households when their ability to access nutritionally adequate and safe food is constrained or unavailable through uncertain or socially unaccepted means(Reference Anderson5). Food insecurity has been used interchangeably with food poverty. Food insecurity tends to focus on measuring the extent of the issue, whilst food poverty describes the lived experiences of households on low incomes who may have limited access and ability to afford food(Reference Lambie-Mumford6). Food poverty is not experienced alone: driven by income insecurity, it is experienced alongside (and in competition with) fuel poverty and other strains on household budgets. Food insecurity can be experienced as mild to moderate to severe(Reference Ballard, Kepple and Cafiero7). Mild experiences might include anxiety around a household’s ability to obtain food. For moderate experiences households might compromise on diet quality or quantity. Severe food insecurity focuses on experiences of hunger. Hunger is the embodied sensation of severe food insecurity that goes beyond a temporary state.

Increased focus has been given to the nutritional status of children living Scotland. Childhood obesity rates have risen to 18 %(Reference Birtwistle, Deakin and Whitford8) and there are growing inequalities between children living in Scotland’s most and least deprived areas(Reference Miall, Fergie and Pearce9). In 2019/20 children living in the most deprived areas were twice as likely to be at risk of obesity than their peers living in the least deprived areas(Reference Miall, Fergie and Pearce9). These inequalities are unlikely to be the result of social patterning in physical activity, where there are limited differences observed across deprivation levels(Reference Mccrorie and Ellaway10). It is likely therefore that the social patterning identified in nutritional intake(Reference Inchley, Mabelis and Brown11) is a major contributor to these inequalities in obesity outcomes. With health inequalities widening, it is vital that children and young people living in poverty are a key focus of population health concerns(Reference Miall, Fergie and Pearce9,Reference Marmot12) . These concerns have been recognised in Scottish policymaking. Scotland’s First Minister, Humza Yousaf, reiterated the Scottish Government’s commitment to reducing child poverty in a 2023 policy prospectus, highlighting policies aimed at increasing family incomes, supporting parents into employment and free school meals(13). Addressing food insecurity is a measure through which the success of these policies could be judged.

The aim of this review is to highlight the key issues in relation to food insecurity among children and young people living in Scotland. It provides an overview of the current context of food insecurity more generally within the UK and specifically in Scotland. It considers who is impacted most, causes of insecurity, and the impacts of food insecurity on health and wellbeing. It then outlines some of the policy actions put in place to mitigate the impact of food insecurity, and the evidence for the effectiveness of these policies. The review concludes by considering the ways in which a human right to food might benefit children and young people living in Scotland.

Context of food insecurity in the UK

Increasing food insecurity

Those who are most socioeconomically disadvantaged are most likely to experience food insecurity. The Office for National Statistics reported that 61 % of those living in the UK’s most deprived areas reported cutting down on food purchases compared with 44 % of those living in the least deprived areas(Reference Scott2). A poll from August 2022 found that 40 % of people living in the UK in receipt of Universal Credit, a benefit for those on a low income or out of work, reported skipping meals over the previous three months(3).

In September 2022, 26 % of households in England with children reported experiencing food insecurity compared with 12·4 % in May 2020(Reference Goudie14). Households reporting experiences of food insecurity are much more likely to report that they are concerned about the impact of being unable to afford sufficient food on their children’s mental and physical health, as well as the wider impact of the cost-of-living crisis on their children’s friendships and social development. Teaching staff have reported an increase in children arriving at school hungry and with lunches brought from home with insufficient food(Reference Huseyinoglu15). Teaching staff also support extending eligibility for Free School Meals(16). Data on secondary school pupil registration for FSM in Scotland indicates that this has increased from 14·2 % in 2016 to 18·6 % in 2022(17).

To manage experiences of food insecurity, those affected often rely on emergency food aid. The number of emergency food aid parcels distributed has increased substantially in recent years. For example, the Trussell Trust network (the largest emergency food aid network in the UK) reports that the number of parcels they distributed from April-September 2022 rose by almost one third(18). Similar percentage increases are reported for the numbers of parcels distributed for children (rising from 368 160 April-September 2021 to 483 677 April-September 2022). In Scotland during the same time period, 116 000 emergency food parcels were distributed, with 40 000 parcels for children(4). Households with children are overrepresented in referrals to Trussell Trust food banks(19), despite the Scottish Government’s introduction of a Scottish Child Payment. From February 2021, this provided low-income households with children under 6 years with an additional (at that time) £20 per week for each child. From November 2022 this increased to £25 for each child under 16 years for eligible families.

Who is impacted most?

Single parent families (who are more likely to be headed by women) are the group most likely to report experiencing food insecurity(Reference Birtwistle, Deakin and Whitford8). For single parents, 34 % reported that lack of resources had left them worried that they might run out of food during the previous 12 months, with 12 % reporting that they had run out of food. Single parents (predominantly single mothers) and single men are also the most frequent users of food banks(Reference Sosenko, Littlewood and Bramley20Reference Bramley, Treanor and Sosenko23). There is a lack of data available on levels of food insecurity among Children and Young People (CYP), in part due to the household level focus of data collection in this area. A Food Foundation survey has highlighted the differences in levels of food insecurity between households with (23·4 %) and without children (14·8 %)(24).

Causes of food insecurity

Insufficient income

A range of causes have been identified to explain increases in food insecurity across Scotland and the UK. The main overarching explanation is insufficient income(19,Reference Long, Stretesky and Graham25) . This can arise from both wages and benefits being too low, particularly in the context of rising costs. In-work poverty has increased in the last 25 years. In 1996/7, 44 % of children and working-age adults living in poverty were living in families where at least one adult was working. By 2019/20 this had increased to 66 %(26). A main driver of insufficient income is a labour market in which wages have not risen in line with inflation(27,Reference Reeves, Loopstra and Stuckler28) . This limits families’ spending power, making some of the most basic necessities, such as food and fuel, a challenge to purchase in sufficient quantities.

Families on low-incomes are at increased risk of experiencing food insecurity. After housing and energy, food spending is likely to take up the greatest proportion of these household’s outgoings(Reference Douglas, Ejebu and Garcia29,Reference Davis and Geiger30) . Evidence indicates that amongst food bank users in the UK, low to no income is common(Reference Perry, Williams and Sefton21,Reference Pybus, Power and Pickett31) . It is estimated that 94 % of people who use a food bank are living in destitution(Reference Bramley, Treanor and Sosenko23). Low-income households often consider food spending to be a flexible expense and will prioritise other spending ahead of food expenditure, such as housing(Reference Moffatt, Lawson and Patterson32). The impact of this is that families on low incomes need to spend a higher proportion of their income in order to eat a diet in line with dietary recommendations(Reference Scott, Sutherland and Taylor33).

Welfare reform

Families in receipt of benefits are also impacted by having insufficient income to meet their needs. Following the global financial crash in 2008, the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government introduced a range of austerity policies, cutting public spending and freezing benefits. Additional changes were introduced through the Welfare Reform Act which reformed benefits in the following years including capping benefits for personal independence payments, limiting housing benefit payments when households had extra bedrooms, payments for child benefit being limited to only two children per household, increased conditionality and sanctions, and the move towards the Universal Credit system. Universal Credit has been identified as a key explanation for increases in food insecurity, particularly the introduction of a five-week wait for claimants to receive their first payments. This has increased the likelihood that claimants are indebted to the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP), putting further pressure on household budgets. Bennett-Clemmow et al. (Reference Bennett-Clemmow, Oguntimehim and Steeden34) identified that 47 % of people referred to a Trussell Trust food bank were indebted to the DWP. These policies and changes to the welfare system have been identified as key causes for increases in food insecurity(Reference Perry, Williams and Sefton21,Reference Garratt, Spencer and Ogden35Reference Lambie-Mumford and Green38) . For example, Loopstra et al. (Reference Loopstra, Reeves and Taylor-Robinson39) highlighted that as benefits reduce, higher rates of food parcel distribution are seen across local authorities in Scotland, Wales and England. In a later study, Loopstra et al. (Reference Loopstra, Fledderjohann and Reeves40), found that sanctioning of benefit claimants was positively associated with increased food bank use. Despite significant media attention on such reforms, and various experiences of poverty(Reference Alston41), these issues remain.

Food prices

From mid-2021 food prices started to increase steeply in the UK, with inflation levels peaking at 19·2 % in March 2023(42). Of particular concern has been the above average increase for staple foods such as milk, cheese, eggs, pasta and oil(Reference Scott2). As would be expected, the increase in the cost of food is associated with an increase in the number of households reporting that they have experienced food insecurity. In August 2020, 6·9 % of UK households reported moderate or severe food insecurity compared with 18·4 % of households in September 2022(24). In 2021, 9 % of adults responding to the Scottish Health Survey reported that they had been worried that they would run out of food because of a lack of money or other resources in the last 12 months(Reference Birtwistle, Deakin and Whitford8). Food insecurity figures for Scotland have not yet been updated to take into account the highest levels of food inflation.

Geo-political events

Additional challenges are geo-political events. In January 2020, the UK left the European Union, leading to disruptions in food supply chains(Reference Bakker, Datta and De Lyon43). Issues have included temporary food shortages and higher food prices. Food and energy prices have also come under considerable pressure after Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. With export of goods restricted from Ukraine and Russia, prices of staples such as wheat and oils have increased, as have the food products that include these ingredients(Reference Scott2). The invasion has also impacted fuel supplies, coinciding with the Energy Price Cap increasing, and average household electricity and gas payments in the UK have almost doubled(44), making cooking even more challenging.

Food insecurity and diet quality

Being food insecure increases the likelihood that individuals will consume diets that are of a lower quality(Reference Simmet, Depa and Tinnemann45). Food insecurity is associated with below average intakes of fruits, vegetables and fish(Reference Kirkpatrick and Tarasuk46), and a less diverse diet(Reference Shinwell, Bateson and Nettle47). Children living in food insecure households are at higher risk of having diets of poorer nutritional quality, with lower consumption of vegetables and higher consumption of nutrient poor highly processed foods(Reference Canter, Roberts and Davis48Reference Pilgrim, Barker and Jackson50). Micronutrient intakes have been identified as insufficient in food insecure children, with vitamin D, magnesium and calcium intakes lower than intakes among food secure children(Reference Jun, Cowan and Dodd51).

Emergency food provision generally does not provide diets of sufficient nutritional quality(Reference Simmet, Depa and Tinnemann45). Food provisions available from food banks often do not provide food with sufficient energy, are high in sugar, and the products provided lacking in fruit and vegetables, iron, calcium, zinc and vitamins A, D, C and E(Reference Simmet, Depa and Tinnemann45,Reference Hughes and Prayogo52,Reference Oldroyd, Eskandari and Pratt53) . Where meals are provided, they also tend to be high in fat, sugar and salt and low in key nutrients, such as vitamin D(Reference Oldroyd, Eskandari and Pratt53,Reference Pelham-Burn, Frost and Russell54) . For organisations involved in distributing emergency food, their main concerns can be to address the immediate crisis situation for households facing food insecurity, and reduce the more immediate psychological damage, rather than mitigating longer term nutritional risks(Reference Hughes and Prayogo52).

Impact of food insecurity on health

Inevitably if those experiencing food insecurity are not eating a diet in line with recommendations, there is a greater likelihood that their health will be negatively impacted. Food insecurity is associated with conditions including, diabetes, obesity, metabolic syndrome and inflammation(Reference Loopstra, Fledderjohann and Reeves40). Bramley et al. (Reference Bramley, Treanor and Sosenko23) found amongst a UK sample that those reporting poor health were six times more likely be food insecure than those reporting excellent health. Evidence suggests that children experiencing food insecurity are more likely to report poorer health, more hospitalisations, under or overweight, developmental delays, and to be at greater risk of anaemia and asthma than children who are food secure(Reference Cook, Frank and Levenson55Reference Portrait, Teeuwiszen and Deeg58).

A particular challenge is when those experiencing food insecurity rely on diet to manage chronic health conditions(Reference Douglas, MacIver and Yuill59,Reference Seligman, Jacobs and Lopez60) . These conditions can include higher blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and heart disease(Reference Seligman, Jacobs and Lopez60Reference Laraia64). In children, type 1 diabetes is a chronic health condition that food insecurity makes harder to manage(Reference Bercaw, Reid and Mendoza65Reference Mendoza, Haaland and D’Agostino67). The relationship between food insecurity and health is bi-directional. Poor health also leads to food insecurity with those unable to work often living on insufficient incomes, as well as the additional costs incurred for people who are unwell or disabled(Reference Snell, Bevan and Thomson68).

Food insecurity is also associated with poor mental health, including depression, anxiety, stress, suicidal ideation and mood disorders(Reference Davison and Kaplan69Reference Pourmotabbed, Moradi and Babaei74). Severe food insecurity is associated with poorer mental health outcomes(Reference Jessiman-Perreault and McIntyre72). Cohort studies in the UK have found that food insecurity increases risk of poor mental health in pregnant women(Reference Power, Uphoff and Kelly75) and in low-income families with children(Reference Melchior, Caspi and Howard76), highlighting families’ vulnerabilities. The lived experience of those reporting food insecurity and poor mental health has been explored qualitatively too(Reference Douglas, MacIver and Yuill59,Reference Garthwaite, Collins and Bambra77,Reference Puddephatt, Keenan and Fielden78) . Participants in these studies have discussed the difficulties of uncertainty, worry, stress and lack of food choice and access to appetising food as all impacting on their mental health. In children, an association has been identified between food insecurity and social and emotional wellbeing, with higher risk of behavioural problems, negative health perceptions, life dissatisfaction, anxiety and depression for the children affected(Reference Alaimo, Olson and Frongillo79Reference Melchior, Chastang and Falissard81). Poor health in childhood is associated with poor health in adulthood(Reference Case, Fertig and Paxson82), highlighting the long-term impact of childhood food insecurity.

Impact of food insecurity on other outcomes

For CYP, the physical health impacts of food insecurity may not arise until adulthood. Nonetheless other impacts are experienced in the shorter term. Across children’s age ranges, food insecurity has a negative impact on behavioural, academic and emotional outcomes(Reference Shankar, Chung and Frank83,84) . For young people in post-secondary education there is evidence that food insecurity is associated with lower academic performance and lower retention(Reference Shankar, Chung and Frank83). In qualitative explorations with parents, they described being unable to provide the diet they would choose for their children(Reference Harvey85,Reference O’Connell and Brannen86) . Parents reflected that the diet they were providing for their children was lower quality in comparison to their own diet at the same age, with repetitive meals and low value products of poor nutritional quality(Reference Harvey85).

Research with children and young people around food insecurity in the UK is relatively limited. In Harvey’s study(Reference Harvey85), she spoke with children as well as parents. Children said their parents were not always able to shield them from the impact of food insecurity, with weekends without school food particularly challenging for some. The social impact of food insecurity has been identified as a real concern for children and young people. Sharing of food is an opportunity to build social bonds(Reference O’Connell and Brannen86Reference Laverty88). Children are acutely aware of when their experiences are different from others in their peer groups, and the portrayal of eating a diet as ‘normal’ as possible becomes a key strategy that they pursue(Reference Connolly89). Evidence from beyond the UK has shown that when this is not possible, food insecurity impacts on children and young people’s emotional wellbeing(Reference Connell, Lofton and Yadrick90Reference Velardo, Pollard and Shipman93).

Policy actions to reduce food insecurity in children and young people

Few specific policy actions have been put in place to address food insecurity in the adult population. The UK Government’s decision to increase benefits by the rate of inflation in 2023 is likely to have mitigated the levels of food insecurity that were likely to be seen had these benefits increased at the same rate as wages(24). Levels of food insecurity of households in receipt of Universal Credit have stabilised in 2023 at 48–49 % compared with a high of almost 54 % in 2022(94). The Scottish Welfare Fund is a source of emergency funding that households can apply to that provides them with additional money within a relatively short space of time. There are concerns, however, that those on a low-income are having to rely on this fund on an ongoing, rather than emergency, basis(Reference Ormston, Glencross and Millar95).

Target populations for policy

Schneider and Ingram(Reference Schneider and Ingram96) created a conceptual scheme to group target populations for policies. Within this scheme, each target population can be placed in one of four categories based on whether that group is constructed either positively or negatively in relation to a policy problem, and as either weak or strong in relation to the power they hold in the policy arena. This results in four different types of target populations: (1) advantaged (positive and strong – elderly, business, scientists); (2) contenders (negative and strong – rich people, unions, cultural elite); (3) Dependents (positive and weak – children, mothers, disabled people); (4) Deviants (negative and weak – criminals, drug addicts). They argue that support for policies is likely to be higher among both the public and policymakers where the target population is constructed positively. In terms of food insecurity, the scheme generates hypotheses for why a greater number of policies appear targeted at children and families compared with others who are experiencing food insecurity, such as single men. Indeed, the majority of adults in the UK believe that Governments have a responsibility to support children, and support the extension of policies such as free school meals to achieve this(Reference Lasko-Skinner and Sweetland9799).

Scottish child payment

In 2021, the Scottish Government introduced the Scottish Child Payment with the long-term aim of reducing child poverty. This was initially a payment of £10 per week for families receiving certain means-tested benefits for each child they were caring for under 6 years of age. The payment was introduced in November 2020 and was doubled to £20 in April 2021, during the Covid-19 pandemic. The payment has been increased to £25 per week per child under 16 years of age, and is in addition to Child Benefit Payments, which are also available to families living elsewhere in the UK. Families are paid 4-weekly and are able to spend the money in the ways they deem best. It is estimated that take-up of the benefit is only around 77 %(100). In a qualitative study, Scottish Child Payment recipients (n 39) from across Scotland reported using the money to buy food helped them avoid falling into debt, or prevented them from having rely on emergency food(100).

Food assistance

In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, these targeted policies include Healthy Start vouchers for women who are 10 weeks or more pregnant and families who have children under the age of four. These vouchers allow families to purchase vitamins, milk, fresh, frozen, and tinned fruit and vegetables, fresh, dried, and tinned pulses, and infant formula milk. Scotland runs a similar scheme called Best Start Foods where families are provided with pre-payment cards to purchase healthy foods including milk, infant formula milk, vegetables, pulses and eggs. Evaluation of these schemes is currently limited, but they have been identified as key areas for future evaluation(Reference Stewart, Brophy and Cookson101). The limited quantitative evaluations that have been carried out have not focused on food insecurity. The outcomes that evaluations have focused on have shown mixed results. For example, Parnham et al. (Reference Parnham, Millett and Chang102) analysed pooled Living Costs and Food Survey (LCFS) data from 2010–2017 and concluded that Healthy Start had not increased fruit and vegetable expenditure for participating families compared with non-participating eligible families. In contrast, using a longitudinal design with 296 households, Griffith et al. (Reference Griffith, von Hinke and Smith103) found that fruit and vegetable expenditure increased between December 2004 and November 2006 to December-November 2008, and that the nutritional quality of food purchases improved. Families describing the impact of Healthy Start have identified the scheme as helping to alleviate hunger(Reference Lucas, Jessiman and Cameron104) and to help women buy healthy food during pregnancy(Reference Ohly, Crossland and Dykes105). Multiple explanations can be attributed to these differences including study design (pooled cross-sectional v. longitudinal) as well as the differing time periods and data sources (LCFS v. Kantar panel data). At this time, there have been no evaluations of Best Start Foods.

Beyond the UK, food assistance programmes, such as the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women Infants and Children (WIC) and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) in the USA, have been shown to prevent or mitigate household and child food insecurity, reduce the risk of caregiver and child poor health(Reference Ettinger de Cuba, Chilton and Bovell-Ammon106,Reference Schanzenbach and Thorn107) . Evidence suggests that the health and economic benefits of SNAP are long lasting with children continuing to benefit into adulthood(Reference Hoynes and Schanzenbach108).

School meals

The other main policies which aim to mitigate food insecurity are free school meals (FSM). School meals have a long history in the UK, beginning in the 19th century with charitable organisations providing meals to children whose families were unable to feed them. Manchester was the first municipality to provide FSM to children requiring them. Following concerns around nutritional intakes and the physical condition of conscripts to the Boer War, the 1906 Education Act allowed for local authorities to provide free school meals to children during the school day, though very few did(Reference Keith109). Following World War 2, and the expansion of the welfare state, these duties became statutory and nutritional standards for school meals were set(Reference Chambers, Dundas and Torsney110). In the 1980s, compulsive competitive tendering and the abolition of nutritional standards saw a decline in the nutritional quality of school meals(Reference Chambers, Dundas and Torsney110). Eligibility criteria also changed during this time resulting in over 500 000 children from low-income households becoming ineligible to receive a free school meal(Reference Brown111).

With a focus on rising levels of obesity, and concerns around children’s nutritional intake, food and nutrient standards have been re-introduced across the devolved nations of the UK. In the early 2000s, the Scottish Government published the Hungry for Success(112) guidance document, followed soon after by school food regulations in 2007(113). These were subsequently updated in 2021 to further reduce levels of sugar, improve the nutritional quality of drinks, and reduce the frequency of red and processed meat(114). In England, school food standards are in place and have been mandatory since 2008 for primary schools and in 2009 for middle and secondary schools, and updated standards were introduced in 2015(Reference Evans and Harper115,116) . The introduction of these standards and regulations have been shown to have improved the nutritional quality of school meals in England(Reference Adamson, Spence and Reed117Reference Wickramasinghe, Rayner and Goldacre120), but evidence is limited from Scotland.

Until 2014, FSMs were provided on a means-tested basis across the UK for families in receipt of certain benefits or who had a low annual income. With the Liberal Democrat-Conservative government elected in 2010, a universal FSM system for children in their first three years of primary school was introduced in 2014 in England and in 2015 in Scotland. This had been a Liberal Democrat manifesto commitment in 2010. Wales rolled out a universal free breakfast programme to all primary-school-aged children, whilst Northern Ireland retained the means-tested system, although with wider eligibility criteria. Some of the key policy aims of universal free school meals (UFSM) was to reduce the stigma associated with the means-tested system and to improve children’s health and wellbeing through the provision of healthy food. Interestingly, mitigating food insecurity was less likely to be discussed as a policy aim, though it was recognised as a likely outcome by some key stakeholders involved in delivering the policy(Reference Chambers, Boydell and Ford121). As outlined above, since the introduction of the policy, reported food insecurity and use of emergency food provision has increased massively. This has led for calls for UFSM to be introduced more widely to either all primary school children or all school children, including those in secondary schools. It has been estimated that 800 000 children living in poverty are not eligible to receive FSM under a means-tested system, and almost a quarter of children not receiving a FSM during Covid-19 restrictions were food insecure(99,Reference Yang, Power and Moss122) . The Scottish Government pledged to widen universal provision to all primary school children within the 2021–2025 Scottish Parliament. By 2023, this had only been extended to children in the first five years of primary school, with the capital infrastructure needed for full implementation identified as a barrier by Scotland’s First Minister(123). Universal provision was implemented for children receiving free childcare places in early years settings in Scotland by 2021. The Welsh Government announced in 2023 that universal free school lunches would be available to all primary school pupils, having previously only had a universal service for breakfast. In February 2023, the Mayor of London announced that all primary school children in the capital would be eligible to receive a FSM for the 2023/24, with five boroughs already providing this offering. The main aim outlined for the policy was to provide emergency support to families during the cost-of-living crisis, and to reduce families’ food insecurity(124). There have been calls from third sector organisations working in the areas of poverty alleviation, family support and food to extend FSM eligibility to all children whose families are in receipt of Universal Credit and/or to move to universal provision at primary and secondary level(98,99) .

Ahead of universal provision being introduced for the youngest primary school-aged children, pilots were carried out in Scotland and England. Evaluations of these pilots reported the perceived financial benefit of FSM for families and increases in attainment in England(Reference Kitchen, Tanner and Brown125Reference Rahim, Kotecha and Callanan127). They also indicated that universal FSM had reduced barriers, including stigma, and increased uptake for children who were eligible to receive FSM under the means-tested system(Reference Holford128). The impact on food insecurity was not addressed in the pilots, or directly in the evaluations of the policies’ rollouts in both countries. Evaluations of the fully implemented policy in Scotland show that there has been no impact on attendance or behaviour(Reference Borbely, Gehrsitz and McIntyre129), however, parents perceived a financial benefit(Reference Ford, Eadie and Stead130). Positive outcomes observed in England include increased take-up in previously eligible FSM children, reduction in absence inequalities between children from higher and lower income backgrounds, reductions in obesity, financial benefits for families, and perceived improved readiness for learning(Reference Holford and Rabe131,Reference Sellen, Huda and Gibson132) . Evidence suggests that the policies in both England and Scotland have lowered the consumption of crisps, total fat and sodium with the biggest impacts seen in children from families on low incomes(Reference Parnham, Chang and Millett133). These studies focus on relatively short-term outcomes given the recent implementation of these policies, however, a forecasting study examining the cost-benefits of universal provision for all children were such that for every £1 invested between 2025 and 2045, a return of £1·71 could be expected, with the potential for wider net benefits of £58 billion to the wider economy(134). There is some evidence from Wales that children at higher risk from food insecurity are more likely to take-up a breakfast offering and are less likely to skip breakfast under the universal scheme(Reference Moore, Murphy and Chaplin135). The findings of the evaluations of UFSM suggest that families facing food insecurity are likely to be benefitting from its implementation, however, it is challenging in the short term to assess whether they have reduced or mitigated food insecurity within the context of wider societal issues.

Beyond the UK, and as other areas, particularly within the United States, have introduced universal or have extended existing provision, more evidence of the impact on outcomes has been produced. These benefits include increased fruit and vegetable consumption, improvements in diet quality, improvements in educational difficulties and academic performance, financial benefits for families, reduced obesity risk, reduced health inequalities and reduced food insecurity risk(Reference Cohen, Hecht and McLoughlin136Reference Vik, Van Lippevelde and Øverby140). Holley & Mason(Reference Holley and Mason137) have flagged some of the limitations of these studies, including sample sizes being relatively small in experimental studies, along with incomplete outcome measures, lack of consistency across cohort studies in terms of addressing representativeness, and limited input from children in qualitative evaluations. An additional limitation is that measured outcomes are, as yet, relatively short term, and more time is needed to fully measure the impact of UFSM, particularly on improving health in childhood and beyond.

FSM provision has focused on children in early years or primary school rather than young people attending secondary education. Organisations such as the Scottish Trades Union Congress(141) have campaigned for the Scottish Government to extend universal provision to secondary school pupils in light of the cost-of-living crisis and rising food insecurity. A study carried out by Chambers et al. (Reference Chambers, Dundas and Torsney110) found that where more young people were eating a school meal, take-up amongst those registered for a FSM was higher. In addition, where the proportion of young people registered for a FSM were higher, take-up was also higher among those young people. Interestingly this study indicated that levels of school modernisation did not seem to be associated with take-up, highlighting the importance of social connections for older children in relation to food consumption in schools. Pilots of UFSM at secondary level have run in some limited areas. In Hammersmith and Fulham, a London borough, two secondary schools offered universal FSM as a pilot in 2019. Key findings from evaluation are that uptake increased in young people previously eligible under the means-tested system, teachers reported improved behaviour and increased readiness to learn in the afternoon, and stakeholders perceived that food insecurity had been reduced(Reference Jessiman, Carlisle and Breheny142). The Food provision, culture and environment in secondary schools (FUEL) study, currently underway in England, led by the University of Birmingham and funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), is examining whether School Food Standards improve secondary school pupils’ dietary intake(Reference Murphy, Pallan and Lancashire143). Work more specifically aimed at answering questions around food insecurity is underway through the Free School Meals, Diet Quality and Food Insecurity in Secondary School Pupils Mixed Methods Study (CANTEEN) also funded by NIHR and led by Queen’s University Belfast. The study is examining the role of FSM in addressing food insecurity and diet quality in secondary school pupils (https://fundingawards.nihr.ac.uk/award/NIHR151295). The mixed methods study aims to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of FSM in UK secondary schools on nutritional quality and food insecurity. It will evaluate the association between school-level FSM uptake/individual level uptake on these key outcomes, with economic and process evaluations also undertaken. The findings of these studies will contribute to an up-to-date understanding of the effectiveness of FSM policy in addressing food insecurity and dietary quality.

Out of school food

With the introduction of austerity measures following the global financial crash, concerns were raised about the risk of food insecurity among children during school holidays. This was described as ‘Holiday Hunger’. An All-Party Parliamentary Inquiry into Hunger was chaired by Labour MP Frank Field, whose report highlighted that school holidays were putting 3 million children at risk of hunger(27). The issue was put under the spotlight even more by the school closures resulting from the Covid-19 pandemic. Provision of free school meals during this time came under substantial scrutiny as families shared photographs of woefully inadequate deliveries of food for children to eat over the week for lunch. Manchester United footballer Marcus Rashford galvanised a campaign to address inadequate food provision during this time, putting pressure on government to not only improve provision, but also to commit to providing food over the school holidays to families most in need(Reference Sinha, Lee and Bennett144). When the UK Government rolled out a voucher scheme for children in England in receipt of FSM, many families were unable to access the electronic system(94) or struggled with digital literacy(Reference Lalli145). It is estimated that almost half of eligible children did not receive any form of FSM during the Covid-19 lockdown(Reference Parnham, Laverty and Majeed146). The UK Government announced that the voucher scheme would stop during the school summer holidays of 2020. A legal challenge was mounted by the Non-Governmental Organisation, Sustain, and the Good Law Project to challenge this decision. The UK Government reneged and therefore never took the opportunity to clarify Government responsibility for food provision in court(Reference Parnham, Laverty and Majeed146).

The policy response to these concerns, and others around nutritional intake, physical inactivity, and social isolation, has been to introduce means through which families can access food, either through vouchers/direct payments or through holiday programmes that provide food. In England, the Holiday Activities and Food Programme rolled out from 2018 to 2025. Although annual evaluations of the programme have been carried out, the impact on food insecurity has not been measured, as this is considered a possible additional impact, and is not one of the main outcomes identified in the programme’s logic model(Reference Cox, Campbell-Jack and Blades147). Instead, the focus has been on nutrition, healthy behaviours and educational outcomes. This highlights that food insecurity among CYP’s has tended to be a secondary focus of programmes that might mitigate its impact.

Evaluations of the impact of food provision during holidays on food insecurity have been limited, but there is some evidence to suggest programmes can make a difference. These studies suggest positive impacts, but they have been small in scale. A pilot study(Reference Long, Stretesky and Graham25) surveying parents found that 42 % of children participating in a holiday club in the UK were from insecure households, with 24 % reporting food insecurity with hunger. The results indicated that food insecure households reported benefiting most from the club in terms of it improving their ability to access food during school holidays. Holley & Mason(Reference Holley, Mason and Haycraft148) report similar findings from research with both holiday programme staff and attendees. In a qualitative study, participants identified that the programme had provided not only social and financial benefits, but also had improved nutrition and attenuated hunger. Much more work is required to understand the extent to which holiday programmes can address food insecurity, or whether programmes that provide families with transfers of money are more effective.

Right to food

The concerns outlined in this review around food security have led to calls for the right to food to be enshrined in UK legislation. Whilst it is enshrined in international laws to which the UK is a signatory, international law is harder to enforce than domestic law(Reference Boyle and Flegg149). A right to food includes having adequate, safe, accessible, nutritious food, to be free from hunger, and that methods of food production, conservation and distribution are improved(Reference Boyle and Flegg149). These calls are not new: more than 20 years ago, Dowler & Caraher(Reference Dowler and Caraher150) called for food access and consumption to be framed as core tenants of citizenship. Although food plays a defining role in promoting and maintaining our physical health, it is also a means through which we participate in society and build social relationships. When individuals or families are unable to do this through food insecurity, their social exclusion increases(Reference Dowler, Turner and Dobson151,Reference Lambie-Mumford152) . Within international treaties, the link between food and the dignity of the human person is outlined(Reference Boyle and Flegg149). Food is framed as being more than a nutritional need, and as inherently important to realising other human rights.

The UK Government has been accused of failing in its duty to realise the right to adequate food(153), evidenced through the rise in the number of food banks(4,18) . This has been identified particularly for children, where the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights and the Special Rapporteur on the right to food wrote joining to the UK government expressing concern for:

the deepening level of food insecurity among low-income households, particularly families with children, and the lack of comprehensive measures to ensure their access to adequate food(154).

The Good Food Nation Act sets out the official responsibilities of the Scottish Government, local authorities and other public bodies to ensure that adequate access to food is available to all(155). The right to food has not yet been enshrined in law, however. It is intended that the right to food in Scots law will be enshrined within the forthcoming Human Rights Bill. The Scottish Government has argued that this means that the right to food is approached within the framework of other human rights. Potential challenges to this are that this intersects with areas of policy reserved to the UK Government, such as social security(Reference Boyle and Flegg149). Another route through which children’s right to food could be enshrined in Scots law is through the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) (Incorporation) Bill. The progression of the Bill through parliament has currently been paused by the UK Supreme Court through concern that it may allow Scottish Courts to override Acts of Parliament that contravene the UNCRC. It is likely however that the Bill will be revised and incorporated into law, providing greater protection for children in Scotland to food that is available, accessible and adequate(Reference Morris156). How this right will be implemented remains to seen, but O’Connell & Brannen(Reference O’Connell, Brannen and Ramos157) argue that a well regulated publicly funded school meal system that offers children the equal opportunity to eat nutritious food, without fear of exclusion, is a means through which children’s right to food can be realised. Whilst school meals can be a means through which food insecurity may be mitigated in the school setting, it can only ever be partial given the range of other settings, institutions and social practices that impact on CYP’s access to and experiences of food.

Conclusion

This review has outlined the challenges families in Scotland and the rest of the UK are facing in feeding their children. Food inflation has risen steeply within the context of a wider cost-of-living crisis. Single parent families are at particularly high risk of experiencing food insecurity. Policy action around food insecurity has been more focused on families with children than other population groups. Many of these policies offer food directly or indirectly, rather than addressing the main drivers of food inequality, such as inadequate incomes and rising costs. Policies like the Scottish Child Payment are exceptions, but without wider systemic change their impacts might be limited if levels of absolute and relative poverty are maintained. There is insufficient evidence at this time to assess whether these policies have been successful at reducing or mitigating food insecurity. The long-term impact of food insecurity needs to be closely monitored, as well as its contribution to health inequalities. This review concluded focusing on the adoption of a right to food within Scotland. Whilst there have been moves towards this, it has not yet been realised. Enshrining the right to food in legislation would clarify governments’ responsibilities in ensuring that all citizens, including children, are able to access adequate food. This needs implementation alongside wider system change to ensure that families also have adequate incomes to lift them out of all forms of poverty, not only food.

Financial support

This work was supported by the Medical Research Council (grant numbers MC_UU_00022/1 (SC); MC_UU_00022/2 (GF)); The Chief Scientist Office (Scottish Government Health Directorates) (grant numbers SPHSU16 (SC); SPHSU17 (GF)); KM was supported by a University of Glasgow College of Medicine, Veterinary & Life Sciences Studentship (studentship number 130423-08).

Conflict of interest

There are no conflicts of interest.

Authorship

SC was responsible for the conception and drafting of the work; All authors were responsible for the acquisition and interpretation of data for the work. GF and KM revised it critically for important intellectual content. All authors approved the final manuscript before submission.

References

Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations, International Fund for Agricultural Development, Unicef et al. (2017) The state of food security, nutrition in the world 2017: Building resilience for peace, food security. https://www.fao.org/policy-support/tools-and-publications/resources-details/en/c/1107528/ (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Scott, E (2023) Cost of Living: Food Price Inflation. London: House of Lords Library. https://lordslibrary.parliament.uk/cost-of-living-food-price-inflation/#:∼:text=It%20said%2061 %25 %20of%20those,in%20the%20least%20deprived%20areas (accessed November 2023).Google Scholar
Trussell Trust (2022) Forty percent of people claiming Universal Credit skipping meals to survive, new research from the Trussell Trust reveals. https://www.trusselltrust.org/2022/09/07/forty-percent-of-people-claiming-universal-credit-skipping-meals-to-survive-new-research-from-the-trussell-trust-reveals/ (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Trussell Trust (2022) Emergency food parcel distribution in Scotland: April - September 2022. Trussel Trust. https://www.trusselltrust.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2022/11/MYS-Nation-and-Regional-briefing_Scotland.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Anderson, SA (1990) Core indicators of nutritional state for difficult-to-sample populations. J Nutr 120, 15551598.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lambie-Mumford, H (2017) Hungry Britain: The rise of Food Charity. Bristol: Policy Press.Google Scholar
Ballard, TJ, Kepple, AW & Cafiero, C (2013) The Food Insecurity Experience Scale: Development of a Global Standard for Monitoring Hunger Worldwide. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization.Google Scholar
Miall, N, Fergie, G & Pearce, A (2022) Health Inequalities in Scotland: Trends in Deaths, Health and Wellbeing, Health Behaviours, and Health Services Since 2000. Glasgow: University of Glasgow https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/282637/1/282637.pdf.Google Scholar
Mccrorie, P & Ellaway, A (2017) Objectively measured physical activity levels of Scottish children: analysis from a sub-sample of 10–11 year olds in the growing up in Scotland study. Edinburgh: Scottish Government. https://www.gov.scot/publications/objectively-measured-physical-activity-levels-scottish-children-analysis-sub-sample/ (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Inchley, J, Mabelis, J, Brown, J et al. (2023) Findings from the HBSC 2022 Survey in Scotland. Glasgow: Univeristy of Glasgow. https://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/healthwellbeing/research/mrccsosocialandpublichealthsciencesunit/programmes/complexity/healthbehaviourinschool-agedchildrenhbscscotlandstudy/ (accessed August 2023).Google Scholar
Marmot, M (2013) Fair society, healthy lives. The Marmot Review. https://www.instituteofhealthequity.org/resources-reports/fair-society-healthy-lives-the-marmot-review (accessed March 2023).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scottish Government (2023) A fresh start for Scotland. Edinburgh: Scottish Government. https://www.gov.scot/news/a-fresh-start-for-scotland/ (accessed November 2023).Google Scholar
Goudie, S (2022) New data show 4 million children in households affected by food insecurity. https://foodfoundation.org.uk/publication/new-data-show-4-million-children-households-affected-food-insecurity (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
National Education Union (2023) IFS on free school meals. https://neu.org.uk/latest/press-releases/ifs-free-school-meals (accessed July 2023).Google Scholar
Scottish Government (2022) School Healthy Living Survey Statistics 2022. Edinburgh: Scottish Government. https://www.gov.scot/publications/school-healthy-living-survey-statistics-2022/pages/2/ (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Trussell Trust (2022) Emergency food parcel distribution in the United Kingdom: April - September 2022. https://www.trusselltrust.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2022/11/MYS-UK-Factsheet-2022.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Trussell Trust (2023) Hunger in Scotland. Trussel Trust. https://www.trusselltrust.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/06/2023-Hunger-in-Scotland-report-AW-web.pdf (accessed August 2023).Google Scholar
Sosenko, F, Littlewood, M, Bramley, G et al. (2019) A study of poverty, food insecurity in the UK. The Trussell Trust. https://www.stateofhunger.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/State-of-Hunger-Report-November2019-Digital.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Perry, J, Williams, M, Sefton, T et al. (2014) Emergency use only: Understanding, reducing the use of food banks in the UK. Child Poverty Action Group. https://www.trusselltrust.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2016/01/foodbank-report.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Loopstra, R & Lalor, D (2017) Financial insecurity, food insecurity, and disability: The profile of people receiving emergency food assistance from The Trussell Trust Foodbank Network in Britain. London: The Trussell Trust. https://www.trusselltrust.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2017/06/OU_Report_final_01_08_online.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Bramley, G, Treanor, M, Sosenko, F et al. (2021) State of Hunger: Building the evidence on poverty, destitution,, food insecurity in the UK. The Trussell Trust. https://www.trusselltrust.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2021/05/State-of-Hunger-2021-Report-Final.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
The Food Foundation (2023) Food insecurity tracking. https://foodfoundation.org.uk/initiatives/food-insecurity-tracking#tabs/ (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Long, MA, Stretesky, PB, Graham, PL et al. (2018) The impact of holiday clubs on household food insecurity—a pilot study. Health Social Care Community 26, e261e9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
The Health Foundation (2022) In-work poverty trends. https://www.health.org.uk/evidence-hub/money-and-resources/poverty/in-work-poverty-trends (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
All-Party Parliamentary Inquiry into Hunger (2014) Feeding Britain: A strategy for zero hunger in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. The Children’s Society. https://feedingbritain.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/feeding_britain_report_2014-2.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Reeves, A, Loopstra, R & Stuckler, D (2017) The growing disconnect between food prices and wages in Europe: cross-national analysis of food deprivation and welfare regimes in twenty-one EU countries, 2004–2012. Public Health Nutr 20, 14141422.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Douglas, F, Ejebu, O-Z, Garcia, A et al. (2015) The nature, extent of food poverty/insecurity in Scotland. NHS Health Scotland. https://www.healthscotland.scot/media/2228/the-nature-and-extent-of-food-poverty-and-insecurity-in-scotland.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Davis, O & Geiger, BB (2017) Did food insecurity rise across Europe after the 2008 crisis? An analysis across welfare regimes. Social Policy Soc 16, 343360.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pybus, K, Power, M & Pickett, KE (2021) ‘We are constantly overdrawn, despite not spending money on anything other than bills and food’: a mixed-methods, participatory study of food and food insecurity in the context of income inequality. J Poverty Social Justice 29, 2145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moffatt, S, Lawson, S, Patterson, R et al. (2015) A qualitative study of the impact of the UK ‘bedroom tax’. J Public Health 38, 197205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, C, Sutherland, J & Taylor, A (2018) Affordability of the UK’s Eatwell Guide. https://foodfoundation.org.uk/publication/affordability-uks-eatwell-guide (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Bennett-Clemmow, A, Oguntimehim, J, Steeden, G et al. (2022) Debt to Government, Deductions, Destitution. Trussell Trust. https://www.trusselltrust.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2022/02/Debt-to-government-deductions-and-destitution-qualitative-research-report.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Garratt, E, Spencer, A & Ogden, C (2016) # Stillhungry: Who is Hungry, for How Long, and Why? Chester, UK: West Cheshire Foodbank. https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/160390/1/stillhungry.pdf (accessed July 2023).Google Scholar
Garthwaite, K (2016) Stigma, shame and ‘people like us’: an ethnographic study of foodbank use in the UK. J Poverty Social Justice 24, 277289.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jenkins, RH, Aliabadi, S, Vamos, EP et al. (2021) The relationship between austerity and food insecurity in the UK: a systematic review. EClinicalMedicine 33, 100781.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lambie-Mumford, H & Green, MA (2017) Austerity, welfare reform and the rising use of food banks by children in England and Wales. Area 49, 273279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loopstra, R, Reeves, A, Taylor-Robinson, D et al. (2015) Austerity, sanctions, and the rise of food banks in the UK. BMJ 350, h1775.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Loopstra, R, Fledderjohann, J, Reeves, A et al. (2018) Impact of welfare benefit sanctioning on food insecurity: a dynamic cross-area study of food bank usage in the UK. J Social Policy 47, 437457.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alston, P (2018) Statement on visit to the United Kingdom, by Professor Philip Alston, United Nations Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights. United Nations. https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/Documents/Issues/Poverty/EOM_GB_16Nov2018.pdf (accessed November 2023).Google Scholar
Office for National Statistics (2023) Cost of living insights: Food. Office for National Statistics. https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflationandpriceindices/articles/costoflivinginsights/food (accessed November 2023).Google Scholar
Bakker, JD, Datta, N, De Lyon, J et al. ( 2022) Post-Brexit Imports, Supply Chains, and the Effect on Consumer Prices. London: UK in a Changing Europe https://ukandeu.ac.uk/research-papers/post-brexit-imports-supply-chains-and-the-effect-on-consumer-prices/.Google Scholar
Office for National Statistics (2023) Cost of living insights: Energy. Office for National Statistics. https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflationandpriceindices/articles/costoflivinginsights/energy (accessed November 2023).Google Scholar
Simmet, A, Depa, J, Tinnemann, P et al. (2017) The nutritional quality of food provided from food pantries: a systematic review of existing literature. J Academy Nutr Diet 117, 577588.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kirkpatrick, SI & Tarasuk, V (2008) Food insecurity is associated with nutrient inadequacies among Canadian adults and adolescents. J Nutr 138, 604612.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shinwell, J, Bateson, M, Nettle, D et al. (2022) Food insecurity and patterns of dietary intake in a sample of UK adults. Br J Nutr 128, 770777.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canter, KS, Roberts, MC & Davis, AM (2017) The role of health behaviors and food insecurity in predicting fruit and vegetable intake in low-income children. Children’s Health Care 46, 131150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, J & Tarasuk, V (2022) The relationship between diet quality and the severity of household food insecurity in Canada. Public Health Nutr 25, 10131026.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pilgrim, A, Barker, M, Jackson, A et al. (2012) Does living in a food insecure household impact on the diets and body composition of young children? Findings from the Southampton Women’s Survey. J Epidemiol Community Health 66, e6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jun, S, Cowan, AE, Dodd, KW et al. (2021) Association of food insecurity with dietary intakes and nutritional biomarkers among US children, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2011–2016. Am J Clin Nutr 114, 10591069.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hughes, D & Prayogo, E (2018) A nutritional analysis of the Trussell trust emergency food parcel. https://www.trusselltrust.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2018/06/Food_Parcel_Report_April_2018.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Oldroyd, L, Eskandari, F, Pratt, C et al. (2022) The nutritional quality of food parcels provided by food banks and the effectiveness of food banks at reducing food insecurity in developed countries: a mixed-method systematic review. J Hum Nutr Diet 35, 12021229.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelham-Burn, SE, Frost, CJ, Russell, JM et al. (2014) Improving the nutritional quality of charitable meals for homeless and vulnerable adults. A case study of food provision by a food aid organisation in the UK. Appetite 82, 131137.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cook, JT, Frank, DA, Levenson, SM et al. (2006) Child food insecurity increases risks posed by household food insecurity to young children’s health. J Nutr 136, 10731076.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eicher-Miller, HA, Mason, AC, Weaver, CM et al. (2009) Food insecurity is associated with iron deficiency anemia in US adolescents. Am J Clin Nutr 90, 13581371.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kirkpatrick, SI, McIntyre, L & Potestio, ML (2010) Child hunger and long-term adverse consequences for health. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 164, 754762.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Portrait, F, Teeuwiszen, E & Deeg, D (2011) Early life undernutrition and chronic diseases at older ages: the effects of the Dutch famine on cardiovascular diseases and diabetes. Social Sci Med 73, 711718.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Douglas, F, MacIver, E & Yuill, C (2020) A qualitative investigation of lived experiences of long-term health condition management with people who are food insecure. BMC Public Health 20, 115.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Seligman, HK, Jacobs, EA, Lopez, A et al. (2012) Food insecurity and glycemic control among low-income patients with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes Care 35, 233238.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vozoris, NT & Tarasuk, VS (2003) Household food insufficiency is associated with poorer health. J Nutr 133, 120126.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Holben, DH & Pheley, AM (2006) Diabetes risk and obesity in food-insecure households in rural Appalachian Ohio. Preventing Chronic Dis 3, A82.Google ScholarPubMed
Seligman, HK, Bindman, AB, Vittinghoff, E et al. (2007) Food insecurity is associated with diabetes mellitus: results from the National Health Examination and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999–2002. J General Internal Med 22, 10181023.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Laraia, BA (2013) Food insecurity and chronic disease. Adv Nutr 4, 203212.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bercaw, H, Reid, LA, Mendoza, JA et al. (2023) Food insecurity and adequacy of dietary intake in youth and young adults with youth-onset type 1 and type 2 diabetes. J Academy Nutr Diet 123, 11621172.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marjerrison, S, Cummings, EA, Glanville, NT et al. (2011) Prevalance and associations of food insecurity in children with diabetes mellitus. J Pediatr 158, 607611.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mendoza, JA, Haaland, W, D’Agostino, RB et al. (2018) Food insecurity is associated with high risk glycemic control and higher health care utilization among youth and young adults with type 1 diabetes. Diabetes Res Clin Pract 138, 128137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snell, C, Bevan, M & Thomson, H (2015) Justice, fuel poverty and disabled people in England. Energy Res Social Sci 10, 123132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davison, KM & Kaplan, BJ (2015) Food insecurity in adults with mood disorders: prevalence estimates and associations with nutritional and psychological health. Ann General Psychiatry 14, 17.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heflin, C, Kukla-Acevedo, S & Darolia, R (2019) Adolescent food insecurity and risky behaviors and mental health during the transition to adulthood. Children Youth Serv Rev 105, 104416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davison, KM, Marshall-Fabien, GL & Tecson, A (2015) Association of moderate and severe food insecurity with suicidal ideation in adults: national survey data from three Canadian provinces. Social Psychiatry Psychiatric Epidemiol 50, 963972.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jessiman-Perreault, G & McIntyre, L (2017) The household food insecurity gradient and potential reductions in adverse population mental health outcomes in Canadian adults. SSM-Population Health 3, 464472.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Maynard, M, Andrade, L, Packull-McCormick, S et al. (2018) Food insecurity and mental health among females in high-income countries. Int J Environ Res Public Health 15, 1424.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pourmotabbed, A, Moradi, S, Babaei, A et al. (2020) Food insecurity and mental health: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Public Health Nutr 23, 17781790.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Power, M, Uphoff, E, Kelly, B et al. (2017) Food insecurity and mental health: an analysis of routine primary care data of pregnant women in the Born in Bradford cohort. J Epidemiol Community Health 71, 324328.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Melchior, M, Caspi, A, Howard, LM et al. (2009) Mental health context of food insecurity: a representative cohort of families with young children. Pediatr 124, e564e72.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Garthwaite, KA, Collins, PJ & Bambra, C (2015) Food for thought: an ethnographic study of negotiating ill health and food insecurity in a UK foodbank. Social Sci Med 132, 3844.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Puddephatt, J-A, Keenan, GS, Fielden, A et al. (2020) ‘Eating to survive’: a qualitative analysis of factors influencing food choice and eating behaviour in a food-insecure population. Appetite 147, 104547.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alaimo, K, Olson, CM & Frongillo, EA (2001) Food insufficiency and American school-aged children’s cognitive, academic, and psychosocial development. Pediatr 108, 4453.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Molcho, M, Gabhainn, SN, Kelly, C et al. (2007) Food poverty and health among school children in Ireland: findings from the health behaviour in school-aged children (HBSC) study. Public Health Nutr 10, 364370.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Melchior, M, Chastang, J-F, Falissard, B et al. (2012) Food insecurity and children’s mental health: a prospective birth cohort study. PloS One 7, e52615.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Case, A, Fertig, A & Paxson, C (2005) The lasting impact of childhood health and circumstance. J Health Econ 24, 365389.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shankar, P, Chung, R & Frank, DA (2017) Association of food insecurity with children’s behavioral, emotional, and academic outcomes: a systematic review. J Dev Behav Pediatr 38, 135150.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Department for Education (2014) National statistics: GCSE and equivalent attainment by pupil characteristic. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/gcse-and-equivalent-attainmentby-pupil-characteristics-2014 (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Harvey, K (2016) “When I go to bed hungry and sleep, I’m not hungry”: children and parents’ experiences of food insecurity. Appetite 99, 235244.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
O’Connell, R, Brannen, J (2021) Families and Food in Hard Times: European Comparative Research. London: UCL Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knight, A, O’Connell, R & Brannen, J (2018) Eating with friends, family or not at all: young people’s experiences of food poverty in the UK. Children Soc 32, 185194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laverty, L (2019) Managing food insecurity through informal networks of care: an ethnography of youth practices in the North of England. Sociology Health Illness 41, 709722.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Connolly, AE (2022) Understanding children’s lived experiences of food insecurity: a study of primary school-aged children in Leeds. PhD Thesis, Leeds: University of Leeds.Google Scholar
Connell, CL, Lofton, KL, Yadrick, K et al. (2005) Children’s experiences of food insecurity can assist in understanding its effect on their well-being. J Nutr 135, 16831690.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fram, MS, Frongillo, EA, Jones, SJ et al. (2011) Children are aware of food insecurity and take responsibility for managing food resources. J Nutr 141, 11141119.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leung, CW, Stewart, AL, Portela-Parra, ET et al. (2020) Understanding the psychological distress of food insecurity: a qualitative study of children’s experiences and related coping strategies. J Academy Nutr Diet 120, 395403.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Velardo, S, Pollard, CM, Shipman, J et al. (2021) How do disadvantaged children perceive, understand and experience household food insecurity?. Int J Environ Res Public Health 18, 4039.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Human Rights Watch (2020) UK: Children in England going hungry with schools shut. https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/05/27/uk-children-england-going-hungry-schools-shut (accessed July 2023).Google Scholar
Schneider, A & Ingram, H (1993) Social construction of target populations: implications for politics and policy. Am Political Sci Rev 87, 334347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lasko-Skinner, R & Sweetland, J (2020) Food in a pandemic. from renew normal: the people’s commission on life after covid-19. Demos 57, 20152020.Google Scholar
The Food Foundation (2022) 72 % of the public support the expansion of Free School Meals. https://foodfoundation.org.uk/publication/72-public-support-expansion-free-school-meals (accessed July 2023).Google Scholar
The Children’s Food Campaign (2022) Public overwhelmingly supports universal free school meals in primary schools. https://www.sustainweb.org/news/mar22-school-meals-poll/#:∼:text=66 %25 %20of%20UK%20adults%20would,food%20prices%20and%20fuel%20bills (accessed July 2023).Google Scholar
Stewart, E, Brophy, S, Cookson, R et al. (2023) Using administrative data to evaluate national policy impacts on child and maternal health: a research framework from the maternal and child health network (MatCHNet). J Epidemiol Community Health 77, 710713.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Parnham, J, Millett, C, Chang, K et al. (2021) Is the healthy start scheme associated with increased food expenditure in low-income families with young children in the United Kingdom?. BMC Public Health 21, 111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Griffith, R, von Hinke, S & Smith, S (2018) Getting a healthy start: the effectiveness of targeted benefits for improving dietary choices. J Health Econ 58, 176187.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lucas, PJ, Jessiman, T & Cameron, A (2015) Healthy start: the use of welfare food vouchers by low-income parents in England. Social Policy Soc 14, 457469.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ohly, H, Crossland, N, Dykes, F et al. (2019) A realist qualitative study to explore how low-income pregnant women use healthy start food vouchers. Maternal Child Nutr 15, e12632.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ettinger de Cuba, S, Chilton, M, Bovell-Ammon, A et al. (2019) Loss of SNAP is associated with food insecurity and poor health in working families with young children. Health Affairs 38, 765773.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schanzenbach, DW & Thorn, B (2019) Food support programs and their impacts on very young children. Health Affairs, Health Policy Brief. Published online: 28 March, 2019. doi: 10.1377/hpb20190301.863688.Google Scholar
Hoynes, HW & Schanzenbach, DW (2018) Safety net investments in children. Spring 2018, 89150.Google Scholar
Keith, R (2020) Marcus Rashford: a brief history of free school meals in the UK The Conversation [Internet]. https://theconversation.com/marcus-rashford-a-brief-history-of-free-school-meals-in-the-uk-140896 (accessed July 2023).Google Scholar
Chambers, S, Dundas, R & Torsney, B (2016) School and local authority characteristics associated with take-up of free school meals in Scottish secondary schools, 2014. Contemp Social Sci 11, 5263.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brown, RC (1980) School Meals. London: Hansard.Google Scholar
Scottish Executive (2002) Hungry for Success A Whole School Approach to Schools Meals in Scotland. Edinburgh: The Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Scottish Government (2008) Healthy Eating in Schools: A Guide to Implementing the National Requirements for Food and Drink in Schools (Scotland) Regulations 2008. Edinburgh: The Scottish Government.Google Scholar
Scottish Government (2021) Healthy Eating in Schools: A guide to implementing the Nutritional Requirements for Food and Drink in Schools (Scotland) Regulations 2020. Edinburgh. https://www.gov.scot/binaries/content/documents/govscot/publications/advice-and-guidance/2021/02/healthy-eating-schools-guidance-2020/documents/healthy-eating-schools/healthy-eating-schools/govscot%3Adocument/healthy-eating-schools.pdf (accessed March 2023).Google Scholar
Evans, C & Harper, C (2009) A history and review of school meal standards in the UK. J Hum Nutr Diet 22, 8999.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Department for Education (2023) School food standards practical guide. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/school-food-standards-resources-for-schools/school-food-standards-practical-guide (accessed July 2023).Google Scholar
Adamson, A, Spence, S, Reed, L et al. (2013) School food standards in the UK: implementation and evaluation. Public Health Nutr 16, 968981.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Spence, S, Delve, J, Stamp, E et al. (2013) The impact of food and nutrient-based standards on primary school children’s lunch and total dietary intake: a natural experimental evaluation of government policy in England. PloS One 8, e78298.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Spence, S, Matthews, JN, White, M et al. (2014) A repeat cross-sectional study examining the equitable impact of nutritional standards for school lunches in England in 2008 on the diets of 4–7y olds across the socio-economic spectrum. Int J Behav Nutr Physical Activity 11, 111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wickramasinghe, K, Rayner, M, Goldacre, M et al. (2017) Environmental and nutrition impact of achieving new school food plan recommendations in the primary school meals sector in England. BMJ Open 7, e013840.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chambers, S, Boydell, N, Ford, A et al. (2020) Learning from the implementation of universal free school meals in scotland using normalisation process theory: lessons for policymakers to engage multiple stakeholders. Food Policy 95, 101936.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yang, TC, Power, M, Moss, RH et al. (2022) Are free school meals failing families? Exploring the relationship between child food insecurity, child mental health and free school meal status during COVID-19: national cross-sectional surveys. BMJ Open 12, e059047.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Scottish Parliament (2023) Meeting of the Parliament Thursday 29 June 2023: Session 5. https://www.parliament.scot/api/sitecore/CustomMedia/OfficialReport?meetingId=15402 (accessed June 2023).Google Scholar
Kitchen, S, Tanner, E, Brown, V et al. (2013) Evaluation of the Free School Meals Pilot. London, UK: Department for Education.Google Scholar
MacLardie, J, Martin, C, Murray, L et al. (2008) Evaluation of the Free School Meals Trial for P1 to P3 Pupils. Edinburgh: Scottish Government Social Research.Google Scholar
Rahim, N, Kotecha, M, Callanan, M et al. (2012) Implementing the Free School Meals Pilot. London: National Centre for Social Research.Google Scholar
Holford, A (2015) Take-up of free school meals: price effects and peer effects. Economica 82, 976993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Borbely, D, Gehrsitz, M, McIntyre, S et al. ( 2022) Does the Provision of Universal Free School Meals Improve School Attendance and Behaviour? Glasgow: Discussion Paper: University of Strathclyde https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/82461/.Google Scholar
Ford, A, Eadie, D, Stead, M (2015) Process Evaluation of the Implementation of Universal Free School Meals: Research with Parents. Edinburgh: NHS Health Scotland Process Evaluation of the Implementation of Universal Free School Meals: Research with Parents.Google Scholar
Holford, A & Rabe, B (2022) Going universal. The impact of free school lunches on child body weight outcomes. J Public Econ Plus 3, 100016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sellen, P, Huda, N, Gibson, S et al. ( 2018) Evaluation of Universal Infant Free School Meals. London, UK: Education Policy Institue. https://epi.org.uk/publications-and-research/evaluation-universal-infant-free-school-meals/ (accessed November 2023).Google Scholar
Parnham, JC, Chang, K, Millett, C et al. (2022) The impact of the universal infant free school meal policy on dietary quality in english and Scottish primary school children: evaluation of a natural experiment. Nutrients 14, 1602.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Impact on Urban Health (2022) Investing in children’s future: A cost benefit analysis of Free School Meal provision expansion. https://urbanhealth.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/FSM-Full-Report.pdf (accessed November 2023).Google Scholar
Moore, GF, Murphy, S, Chaplin, K et al. (2014) Impacts of the primary school free breakfast initiative on socio-economic inequalities in breakfast consumption among 9–11-year-old schoolchildren in Wales. Public Health Nutr 17, 12801289.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cohen, JF, Hecht, AA, McLoughlin, GM et al. (2021) Universal school meals and associations with student participation, attendance, academic performance, diet quality, food security, and body mass index: a systematic review. Nutrients 13, 911.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Holley, CE & Mason, C (2019) A systematic review of the evaluation of interventions to tackle children’s food insecurity. Curr Nutr Rep 8, 1127.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pike, J & Colquhoun, D (2009) The relationship between policy and place: the role of school meals in addressing health inequalities. Health Sociology Rev 18, 5060.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vik, FN, Næss, IK, Heslien, KE et al. (2019) Possible effects of a free, healthy school meal on overall meal frequency among 10–12-year-olds in Norway: the school meal project. BMC Res Notes 12, 16.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vik, FN, Van Lippevelde, W & Øverby, NC (2019) Free school meals as an approach to reduce health inequalities among 10–12-year-old Norwegian children. BMC Public Health 19, 18.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Scottish Trades Union Association Women’s Committee (2021) Universal Free School Meals should be extended to all children and young people. https://stuc.org.uk/media-centre/news/1576/universal-free-school-meals-should-be-extended-to-all-children-and-young-people (accessed July 2023).Google Scholar
Jessiman, PE, Carlisle, VR, Breheny, K et al. (2023) A qualitative process evaluation of universal free school meal provision in two London secondary schools. BMC Public Health 23, 115.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Murphy, M, Pallan, M, Lancashire, E et al. (2020) The Food provision, culture and Environment in secondary schooLs (FUEL) study: protocol of a mixed methods evaluation of national school food standards implementation in secondary schools and their impact on pupils’ dietary intake and dental health. BMJ Open 10, e042931.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sinha, IP, Lee, AR, Bennett, D et al. (2020) Child poverty, food insecurity, and respiratory health during the COVID-19 pandemic. Lancet Respir Med 8, 762763.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lalli, GS (2023) ‘In most supermarkets food does not cost £3 per day …’ the impact of the school food voucher scheme during COVID-19. Br Educ Res J 49, 5369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parnham, JC, Laverty, AA, Majeed, A et al. (2020) Half of children entitled to free school meals did not have access to the scheme during COVID-19 lockdown in the UK. Public Health 187, 161164.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cox, K, Campbell-Jack, D & Blades, R (2022) Evaluation of the 2021 holiday activities and food programme. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/evaluation-of-the-2021-holiday-activities-and-food-programme (accessed August 2022).Google Scholar
Holley, CE, Mason, C & Haycraft, E (2019) Opportunities and challenges arising from holiday clubs tackling children’s hunger in the UK: pilot club leader perspectives. Nutrients 11, 1237.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Boyle, K & Flegg, A (2022) The Right to Food in the UK–An Explainer. Stirling: University of Stirling. https://dspace.stir.ac.uk/retrieve/67b40252-e5a0-420f-849e-2662d682f3da/05-Briefing4-food_18MAY22.pdf (accessed November 2023).Google Scholar
Dowler, E & Caraher, M (2003) Local food projects: the new philanthropy?. Political Q 74, 5765.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dowler, E, Turner, S & Dobson, B (2001) Poverty Bites: Food, Health and Poor Families Child Poverty Action Group.Google Scholar
Lambie-Mumford, H (2019) The growth of food banks in Britain and what they mean for social policy. Crit Social Policy 39, 322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nourish Scotland (2023) The right to food campaign. https://www.nourishscotland.org/campaigns/right-to-food/ (accessed July 2023).Google Scholar
Scottish Parliament (2022) Good Food Nation (Scotland) Act 2022. In: Parliament. S, editor. 2022 asp 5. Edinburgh 2022.Google Scholar
Morris, K (2022) Faces of hunger: an intersectional approach to children’s right to food in the United Kingdom. J Law Soc 49, 726752.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O’Connell, R, Brannen, J, Ramos, V et al. (2022) School meals as a resource for low-income families in three European countries: a comparative case approach. Eur Soc 24, 251282.CrossRefGoogle Scholar