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Pandemic threatens food security for many college students

Matthew J. Landry Heather Eicher-Miller
By Matthew J. Landry and Heather Eicher-Miller
Jan. 17, 2021

When university presidents were surveyed in spring of 2020 about what they felt were the most pressing concerns of COVID-19, college students going hungry didn't rank very high.

Just listed food or housing insecurity among their top five concerns.

Granted, these academic leaders had plenty of other things to worry about. Some 86% said they were worried about fall enrollment – a concern that has shown itself to be a legitimate one, especially in light of the fact that low-income students have been dropping out of college at what one headline described as "."

Food-security-445x219.jpg
More college students are uncertain about whether they will have enough to eat.

As in the study of , we see the dropout rate as being related to a host of underlying issues. And not having enough to eat is one of them.

Data support this view. The signs of this growing problem - known as – began to emerge when the COVID-19 epidemic was beginning to take its toll.

found that 38% of students at four-year universities were food-insecure in the previous 30 days. That was up 5 percentage points from .

College students, clearly, warrant special attention as a group. These rates of food insecurity are more than three times the rate of that in all U.S. households, which was in 2019.

Historically, estimates of food insecurity among college students have ranged from 10% to 75%, according to 50 studies from U.S. academic institutions carried out from 2009 to .

Why it matters

This is not just a matter of growling stomachs. This is a straight-up education and health issue.

When students don't really know if they'll be able to get enough to eat, it can lead to a series of problems that make it harder to stay in school. For instance, it can affect and . It can also lead to outcomes for college students.

Food insecurity can also result in disrupted eating patterns if there is or is low.

Campus food pantries

Previous strategies by to fight hunger in their student bodies have varied widely. They include campus food pantries, emergency cash assistance and nutrition education through noncredit classes or workshopse.

These strategies were put to the test during the spring 2020 semester, when nearly said they had trouble meeting their own basic needs during the pandemic.

College food pantries saw in demand. Others said they . This made it even harder to meet the rising food needs of students.

Campus food pantries largely rely on local or regional food banks, which have been dealing with than they are able to meet during the pandemic.

The many students who are attending college remotely will, of course, have less access to campus resources like food pantries.

Federal help

Other potential ways to get more food are government programs like the , known as SNAP. Yet the majority of able-bodied students are not eligible. Long-standing restrictions, like the , prevent full-time students from receiving these benefits.

Such regulatory hurdles were created under the assumption that most students can rely on their parents to get enough to eat. However, college students have vastly different levels of financial support. Some students can rely on their parents for everything and others cannot rely on their parents for anything.

Decreased reliance on parental financial support is for first-generation students and students of color, who now make up .

Under normal circumstances, many college students might rely on part-time jobs to pay for their food.

Two-thirds of the students who were employed before the pandemic said that job insecurity was a problem for them, according to the Hope Center for College, Community, and Justice . As the number of remains elevated, unemployment and underemployment remain a problem.

Jobless students face a potential double threat of less money for food and unemployment benefits cutting off their access to SNAP because the program at least part time.

Attempts have been made at both the federal and state levels to meet the basic food needs of college students. Lawmakers have focused on temporarily suspending eligibility requirements or expanding the criteria for participating in nutrition assistance programs.

aiming to address food insecurity among college students were introduced to Congress during the 2019-2020 legislative session. However, these proposals failed to gain momentum, and the four COVID-19 stimulus bills to date have not addressed the hunger needs of college students. Notably, some students were ineligible to personally receive a because they were claimed as dependents by their parents.

Short-term solutions

Universities and colleges can make it a priority to ensure students are aware of all available campus resources and services. They can also potentially help students apply for federal assistance benefits.

Campus food pantries are not a fully effective and efficacious solution for the scale of college food insecurity, but they can be a good interim solution to increase access to food for students.

Campuses without food pantries can start one, making use of resources the provides. Schools with food pantries can try to get them to .

Universities and colleges can also lean on one another for support. The is a great example of this. It brings together 10 universities across the state of Alabama collectively working to address student food insecurity.The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

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Matthew J. Landry
Matthew J. Landry

Matthew Landry is a postdoctoral research scholar in the Stanford Prevention Research Center in the School of Medicine at Stanford University.

Heather Eicher-Miller
Heather Eicher-Miller

Heather Eicher-Miller is a nutrition epidemiologist at Purdue University focused on solving the problem of U.S. food insecurity which affected 11% of U.S. households in 2019 and creates uncertainty regarding the availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods.

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