Tag Archives: insecurity

Fruit and vegetable “prescriptions” linked to better health and less food insecurity, study finds – CBS News

  1. Fruit and vegetable “prescriptions” linked to better health and less food insecurity, study finds CBS News
  2. How ‘prescribing’ fruits and vegetables can lead to better health – The Washington Post The Washington Post
  3. Eat Your Veggies: Writing ‘Produce Prescriptions’ Could Boost Patients’ Health U.S. News & World Report
  4. ‘Prescriptions’ for fruits and vegetables linked to lower food insecurity, better health The Hill
  5. Prescriptions for fruits and vegetables can improve the health of people with diabetes and other ailments, new study finds The Conversation Indonesia
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Global food insecurity caused by Russia-Ukraine war tops agenda as U.S. assumes UN Security Council presidency – CNBC

  1. Global food insecurity caused by Russia-Ukraine war tops agenda as U.S. assumes UN Security Council presidency CNBC
  2. US Ambassador focuses on food insecurity and human rights during UN Security Council presidency MSNBC
  3. Security Council Report Monthly Forecast, August 2023 – Syrian Arab Republic ReliefWeb
  4. The U.S. is set to take over the presidency of the U.N. Security Council for August WUSF Public Media
  5. Remarks by Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield at a Virtual New York Foreign Press Center Briefing on the U.S. Presidency of the UN Security Council United States Mission to the United Nations
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Women living in states with abortion bans suffer greater economic insecurity


New York
CNN
 — 

Women living in states that restrict or ban abortion face greater economic insecurity than those living in states where they have access, new research finds.

Since the nearly seven months since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, half of all states – 26 in total – have implemented new abortion restrictions or all-out bans.

In nearly all 26 states, there are lower minimum wages, unionization levels, access to Medicaid and unemployment benefits, as well as higher rates of incarceration than states with more lenient abortion policies, according to new research by the Economic Policy Institute.

“These economic policies all compound on each other. And you add to that an abortion ban, it just compounds this financial stress, this economic insecurity,” said Asha Banerjee, an economic analyst with the institute and the author of the report.

Last year, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen made a similar argument to the Financial Oversight Council.

“I believe that eliminating the right of women to make decisions about when and whether to have children would have very damaging effects on the economy and would set women back decades,” Yellen told lawmakers in May.

The lack of abortion access has the greatest economic impact on women of color, especially those already in dire financial conditions, according to Banerjee.

“In many of these states, especially the states which have banned abortion, many of the women who are facing economic challenges already are also women of color,” she said.

Raising the minimum wage is a powerful tool that has been known to have significant impact on closing racial income gaps. But nearly two-thirds of abortion restrictive states have a $7.25 minimum wage, the lowest legal hourly wage for most workers in the United States.

The average minimum wage across the 26 states is $8.17, lower than the average $11.92 for states with no restrictions. (Many of those states also have a higher cost of living, however.)

“If the person denied an abortion is also working a minimum wage job, the negative economic effect is compounded,” the report states.

Many of those low-wage jobs also do not offer benefits like health care, which is why access to Medicaid is critical.

“Medicaid is a lifeline for low-income families and low-income women when jobs might not offer adequate healthcare. Medicaid in the immediate postpartum period is especially important,” said Banerjee.

Just 12 states have not expanded Medicaid benefits since the 2010 Obamacare law, and all of them have restrictive abortion policies.

However, some states with total abortion bans, with few exceptions, have expanded Medicaid, including Missouri. And in five other abortion restrictive states (Idaho, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and South Dakota later this year) residents voted to expand the benefit.

Access to unemployment insurance is another key indicator of a state’s commitment to economic support for residents. Forty-two percent of residents have access to unemployment benefits in states that have abortion protections. Compare that to 30% in states with abortion restrictions.

Even if unemployment is accessible, the amount differs from state to state. For example, in Mississippi, a state with a total abortion ban with limited exceptions, weekly unemployment checks average $217. Meanwhile in Massachusetts, which has a more protective 24-week abortion ban – checks average $556 weekly.

“When you have unemployment insurance it helps create financial stability. These states which have abortion bans also have really terrible unemployment insurance systems with really low benefits which do not help one support oneself,” said Banerjee.

Although women make up a smaller percentage of those incarcerated than men, it is the economic category with the greatest difference between abortion protected and abortion-restricted states. The rate of incarceration in states with restrictive or total bans on abortion is more than one and a half times higher than the rate of incarceration for states with abortion protections.

“It’s very much a racial justice issue because Black and Hispanic women are very disproportionately incarcerated. And that has huge economic impacts on future earnings and the ability to get a job,” said Banerjee.

In some states with abortion restrictions and higher rates of incarceration – legislation has suggested also criminalizing women, doctors or anyone aiding a woman in seeking an abortion.

“The incarceration argument is especially important because in these states where abortion bans have come into play, there’s a huge criminalization aspect,” said Banerjee.

Read original article here

United Nations says billions facing food insecurity levels: ‘world is moving backwards’

A new United Nations report released Wednesday outlined the horrific statistics on worldwide hunger levels, showing that billions of people are facing food insecurities or are on the brink of starvation.   

The report, “The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World,” says world hunger rose in 2021, with around 2.3 billion people facing moderate or severe difficulty obtaining enough to eat. The number facing severe food insecurity increased to about 924 million.

FILE: Sergei, 11, waits his turn to receive donated food during an aid humanitarian distribution in Bucha, in the outskirts of Kyiv, on Tuesday, April 19, 2022. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti, File / AP Newsroom)

Issued by the World Food Program, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, U.N. Children’s Fund, World Health Organization and International Fund for Agricultural Development, the report says the 2021 statistics make clear “the world is moving backwards in its efforts to end hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms.”

The heads of the five agencies say in the report that in addition to the disruptions to supply chains from the war in Ukraine that are driving up food prices, more frequent and extreme climate events are also causing supply problems, especially in low-income countries.

GLOBAL FOOD SHORTAGE A ‘CATASTROPHE,’ UN CHIEF SAYS

The report says hunger kept rising last year in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean, but at a slower pace than from 2019 to 2020.

“In 2021, hunger affected 278 million people in Africa, 425 million in Asia and 56.5 million in Latin America and the Caribbean,” it said.

David Beasley, head of the U.N. World Food Program, said the analysis shows that “a record 345 million acutely hungry people are marching to the brink of starvation” — a 25% increase from 276 million at the start of 2022 before Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24. The number stood at 135 million before the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020.

A woman walks past sacks of wheat flour piled high in the Hamar-Weyne market in the capital Mogadishu, Somalia Thursday, May 26, 2022.  (AP Newsroom)

“There’s a real danger it will climb even higher in the months ahead,” he said. “Even more worrying is that when this group is broken down, a staggering 50 million people in 45 countries are just one step away from famine.”

The prevalence of “undernourishment” — when food consumption is insufficient to maintain an active and healthy life — is used to measure hunger, and it continued to rise in 2021. The report estimates that upwards of 828 million people faced hunger last year.

Before the war, Ukraine and Russia together accounted for almost a third of the world’s wheat and barley exports and half of its sunflower oil. Russia and its ally Belarus, meanwhile, are the world’s No. 2 and 3 producers of potash, a key ingredient of fertilizer.

Beasley called for an urgent political solution that would allow Ukrainian wheat and grain to re-enter global markets.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

U.N. development goals call for ending extreme poverty and having zero hunger by 2030, but the report says projections indicate that 8% of the world’s population — nearly 670 million people — will be facing hunger at the end of the decade. That is the same number of people as in 2015 when the goals were adopted.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Read original article here

Food insecurity rate on Nantucket — Biden’s Thanksgiving getaway location — saw 70% increase in 2021: report

The food insecurity rate on Nantucket, Massachusetts — where President Biden celebrated Thanksgiving at a billionaire’s mansion — has increased by more than 70% in 2020, according to a local health assessment.

Food insecurity in the entire state of Massachusetts was projected to increase by 81% this year, with the second-largest percentage of children at risk of food insecurity, in 2020, according to the Nantucket Community Health Needs Assessment for the 2021 fiscal year.

“Nantucket county was identified as one of four counties that have seen their projected food insecurity rates increase by over 70.0%,” the assessment states. “The Mind the Meal Gap 2020 report also indicates that 1:4 food-insecure children are living in homes that are ineligible for public assistance programs.”

Biden walks out of a shop as he visits Nantucket, Mass., with family Friday, Nov. 26, 2021. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

The report notes that a “large number of residents” on the island “do not have documented residency status.”

Nantucket’s unemployment rate, by comparison, is better than other Massachusetts counties at just 2.9%, and over 3% of Nantucket families have brought in an income below the federal poverty line over the last 12 months, the health assessment says.

BIDEN SPENDING THANKSGIVING AT BILLIONAIRE’S NANTUCKET HOME SHOWS HE’S OUT OF TOUCH, REPUBLICANS SAY

Nantucket Current reporter Jason Graziadei highlighted the island’s efforts to feed those in need in a series of Thursday tweets.

“Around the corner from Secret Service agents protecting the leader of the free world, steps away from the mainland news crews debating the optics of@POTUS staying in the home of a billionaire, the volunteers of the #Nantucket Food Pantry were quietly going about their work today,” he wrote.

Graziadei continued: “Nantucket will be called ‘posh’ and ‘tony’ in the national media this week, but there at the Food Pantry, the goal was simply to feed the island’s low-income residents and take on the growing food insecurity among Nantucket’s working class.”

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 5.5% of Nantucket County’s population is experiencing poverty. The county’s median income was $107,717 between 2015 and 2019, and its income per capita was $55,398 in 2019.

BIDEN REPEATS ‘AMERICA IS BACK’ MESSAGE ON MOST EXPENSIVE THANKSGIVING IN HISTORY

Nantucket Food Pantry manager Yeshe Palmo told the reporter that volunteers distributed 130 turkeys and various side dishes on Thanksgiving.

The Community Foundation for Nantucket in October received a $1.85 million state grant to address food insecurity on the island, according to The Inquirer and Mirror.

President Biden and first lady Jill Biden disembark from Air Force One at Nantucket Island, Massachusetts, November 23, 2021. REUTERS/Tasos Katopodis (Reuters)

The Bidens touched down on Nantucket Tuesday night and spent Thanksgiving at the compound of David Rubenstein, a Carlyle Group co-founder.

Spending Thanksgiving in Nantucket is a tradition of the Biden family dating back decades, but it was put on hold last year due to the pandemic. The White House told reporters earlier Tuesday that the Bidens have previously stayed at Rubenstein’s home.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Meanwhile, inflation has hit a three-decade high and the average cost of this year’s classic Thanksgiving feast has jumped more than 14% from last year’s average, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation’s annual Thanksgiving dinner cost survey. That’s in large part because the cost of a turkey is up nearly 24% from last year. The cost of chicken breasts, meanwhile, has jumped 26% over the past year, according to Labor Department data. 

The industry has largely blamed the price spike on supply chain disruptions and high demand for food, particularly meat.

Fox News’ Jessica Chasmar contributed to this report.



Read original article here