Household food insecurity, living conditions, and individual sense of security: A cross-sectional survey among Burkina Faso refugees in Ghana
Household food insecurity, living conditions, and individual sense of security: A cross-sectional survey among Burkina Faso refugees in Ghana
Food insecurity and achieving adequate nutrition is a major global challenge, especially in vulnerable groups such as refugee communities. In West Africa, thousands of Burkina Faso refugees have crossed the border into northern Ghana due to conflict and instability in their home country. We conducted a one-off cross-sectional survey to assess household food insecurity, living conditions, and sense of security among Burkina Faso refugees currently residing in the Upper East region of Ghana. Study data was collected over 14-21 October 2022 from 498 refugee households, via registered refugee households who were contacted with the help of the community refugee focal persons. We used the validated USAID household food insecurity questionnaire, analysed using Rasch modelling, with descriptive statistics, and linear regression analyses (with significance at p < 0.05) to assess food insecurity. Results revealed that 100% of households experienced food insecurity, with 95.2% defined as moderate or severe, and 70.4% as experiencing severe food insecurity. Refugees from rural areas were less insecure compared to urban refugees (β = -4.25 [CI: -5.79 --2.71], p < .001). Refugees residing in host communities experienced lower food insecurity than those in designated refugee camps (β = -1.56 [CI: -2.74 --0.39,] p = .009). Further, refugees who were dissatisfied with their accommodation size were more likely to experience food insecurity (β = 2.96 [CI: -0.06-2.47], p = .060). Most refugees (73.5%) felt safe and welcomed by host communities. Our results highlight the extremely high prevalence of moderate and severe food insecurity in this vulnerable refugee population. We provide evidence to support the need to improve food distribution logistics, prioritising suitable accommodation, and facilitating access to healthcare. Follow-up research, such as repeated community surveys, can track this evolving situation to continuously inform decision-making for refugee support.
Adolescent, Adult, Burkina Faso, Cross-Sectional Studies, Family Characteristics, Female, Food Insecurity, Food Supply/statistics & numerical data, Ghana, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Refugees/statistics & numerical data, Rural Population/statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult
e0317418
Inusah, Abdul-Wahab
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Brackstone, Ken
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Ahmed, Tahiru Issahaku
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Nartey, David Tetteh
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Boxall, Jessica L.
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Heinson, Ashley I.
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Head, Michael
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Ziblim, Shamsu-Deen
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Raposo, António
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16 January 2025
Inusah, Abdul-Wahab
eb3257d1-251c-46b9-9b88-2caf5bcb1eb9
Raposo, António
86cd84a4-7af4-4290-94b4-dba1f8a02ede
Brackstone, Ken
33db3628-3171-4a7f-99cc-ad15db871fc5
Ahmed, Tahiru Issahaku
2e0e2126-1364-4ae6-be1e-f5531a90134e
Nartey, David Tetteh
607df5b1-2a7e-4477-88e5-663540596968
Boxall, Jessica L.
c8fac297-e666-481f-8bb1-41ab2cbccd3d
Heinson, Ashley I.
822775d1-9379-4bde-99c3-3c031c3100fb
Head, Michael
67ce0afc-2fc3-47f4-acf2-8794d27ce69c
Ziblim, Shamsu-Deen
6d4f0cd7-0f47-41de-9ccf-6c6cf1e99e0f
Inusah, Abdul-Wahab, Brackstone, Ken, Ahmed, Tahiru Issahaku, Nartey, David Tetteh, Boxall, Jessica L., Heinson, Ashley I., Head, Michael and Ziblim, Shamsu-Deen
,
Raposo, António
(ed.)
(2025)
Household food insecurity, living conditions, and individual sense of security: A cross-sectional survey among Burkina Faso refugees in Ghana.
PLoS ONE, 20 (1), , [e0317418].
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0317418).
Abstract
Food insecurity and achieving adequate nutrition is a major global challenge, especially in vulnerable groups such as refugee communities. In West Africa, thousands of Burkina Faso refugees have crossed the border into northern Ghana due to conflict and instability in their home country. We conducted a one-off cross-sectional survey to assess household food insecurity, living conditions, and sense of security among Burkina Faso refugees currently residing in the Upper East region of Ghana. Study data was collected over 14-21 October 2022 from 498 refugee households, via registered refugee households who were contacted with the help of the community refugee focal persons. We used the validated USAID household food insecurity questionnaire, analysed using Rasch modelling, with descriptive statistics, and linear regression analyses (with significance at p < 0.05) to assess food insecurity. Results revealed that 100% of households experienced food insecurity, with 95.2% defined as moderate or severe, and 70.4% as experiencing severe food insecurity. Refugees from rural areas were less insecure compared to urban refugees (β = -4.25 [CI: -5.79 --2.71], p < .001). Refugees residing in host communities experienced lower food insecurity than those in designated refugee camps (β = -1.56 [CI: -2.74 --0.39,] p = .009). Further, refugees who were dissatisfied with their accommodation size were more likely to experience food insecurity (β = 2.96 [CI: -0.06-2.47], p = .060). Most refugees (73.5%) felt safe and welcomed by host communities. Our results highlight the extremely high prevalence of moderate and severe food insecurity in this vulnerable refugee population. We provide evidence to support the need to improve food distribution logistics, prioritising suitable accommodation, and facilitating access to healthcare. Follow-up research, such as repeated community surveys, can track this evolving situation to continuously inform decision-making for refugee support.
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 December 2024
Published date: 16 January 2025
Additional Information:
Copyright: © 2025 Inusah et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Keywords:
Adolescent, Adult, Burkina Faso, Cross-Sectional Studies, Family Characteristics, Female, Food Insecurity, Food Supply/statistics & numerical data, Ghana, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Refugees/statistics & numerical data, Rural Population/statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult
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Local EPrints ID: 497773
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497773
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 488e8ae2-f861-4d2b-a608-689806d6b37b
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Date deposited: 30 Jan 2025 18:01
Last modified: 14 May 2025 02:01
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Contributors
Author:
Abdul-Wahab Inusah
Editor:
António Raposo
Author:
Ken Brackstone
Author:
Tahiru Issahaku Ahmed
Author:
David Tetteh Nartey
Author:
Jessica L. Boxall
Author:
Ashley I. Heinson
Author:
Shamsu-Deen Ziblim
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