Among the findings from the survey, which included 2,000 Americans with an annual household income under $100K:
- 35% of those who have faced food insecurity said they have personally skipped meals, and 32% said their family skipped meals.
- 31% said they didn’t know where their next meal would come from.
- 32% of those who experienced food insecurity said they didn’t have enough money to buy food.
“Access to affordable healthy food should be the norm for every person but, tragically, we find ourselves in a global crisis that needs our attention with more than 820 million people around the world living in hunger, a crisis that has been compounded by the pandemic,” said Dr. Kent Bradley, Chief Health and Nutrition Officer at Herbalife Nutrition, in a press release.
Additional global findings:
- 58% of respondents globally are parents; for those who have experienced food insecurity, 88% are worried their child will have lasting health effects as a result of food insecurity during the pandemic.
- 70% of parents globally said their child was currently distance learning; of those, approximately 60% said they typically rely on school meals to ensure their child is eating healthy meals.
The release also outlined the ways in which American respondents face food insecurity. Of the 61% of U.S. respondents who have faced food insecurity:
- 41% started shopping at different, less expensive stores
- 40% began purchasing less expensive foods
- 40% received food assistance from a food bank or a local community center
- 39% cut back on the amount of food purchased at once
- 34% held onto food to have at a later time