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Food insecurity and the use of coping strategies on multimorbidity, anxiety and depression in South African adults: a nationally representative study

Food insecurity and the use of coping strategies on multimorbidity, anxiety and depression in South African adults: a nationally representative study
Food insecurity and the use of coping strategies on multimorbidity, anxiety and depression in South African adults: a nationally representative study
Objective: to assess the associations between food insecurity, coping strategies, socio-economic status and anxiety, depression and multimorbidity in South Africa.

Methods: data from a nationally representative cross-sectional survey conducted in April 2024 (n=3171; weighted to 20,955,234 adults aged > 18 years) were used. Food insecurity was measured using the Community Childhood Hunger Identification Project (CCHIP) tool, a validated household-level measure commonly used in South Africa. Coping strategy, anxiety and depression were measured using the coping strategies index, Generalised Anxiety Disorder–7 scale and Patient Health Questionnaire–9, respectively. Multimorbidity was self-reported as ≥2 of 14 known chronic conditions. Multivariable logistic regression was used to test associations, and a generalised structural equation model examined the roles of socio-economic status and coping strategies.

Results: being from a food-insecure household more than doubled the odds of experiencing multimorbidity (OR=2.17, 95% CI 2.17, 2.19), depression (OR=2.96, 95% CI 2.95, 2.97) and anxiety (OR=2.82, 95% CI 2.81, 2.83). Food insecurity accounted for approximately 60% of the total association between socio-economic status and depression, and about 88% of the association between socio-economic status and multimorbidity.

Conclusions: food insecurity is significantly associated with adverse physical and mental health outcomes. Interventions to improve food security, especially in low socio-economic populations, should be prioritised given their associations with multimorbidity, anxiety and depression. Potential intervention effects will require longitudinal or experimental evaluation.
Anxiety, Coping strategies, Depression, Food insecurity, Multimorbidity
1932-6203
Gafari, Olatundun
3c7158eb-682c-468c-90a3-6f40a1484255
Craig, Ashleigh
73a7f4e1-1896-493c-83a7-a85675f6541c
Mabetha, Khuthala
6624ced8-61a2-4280-b3ad-6c877155a859
Hornby, Duncan
75cfaf57-72c1-4392-a78c-89b4b1033dca
Hutton, Craig
9102617b-caf7-4538-9414-c29e72f5fe2e
Barker, Mary
374310ad-d308-44af-b6da-515bf5d2d6d2
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Gafari, Olatundun
3c7158eb-682c-468c-90a3-6f40a1484255
Craig, Ashleigh
73a7f4e1-1896-493c-83a7-a85675f6541c
Mabetha, Khuthala
6624ced8-61a2-4280-b3ad-6c877155a859
Hornby, Duncan
75cfaf57-72c1-4392-a78c-89b4b1033dca
Hutton, Craig
9102617b-caf7-4538-9414-c29e72f5fe2e
Barker, Mary
374310ad-d308-44af-b6da-515bf5d2d6d2
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4

Gafari, Olatundun, Craig, Ashleigh, Mabetha, Khuthala, Hornby, Duncan, Hutton, Craig, Barker, Mary and Norris, Shane A. (2026) Food insecurity and the use of coping strategies on multimorbidity, anxiety and depression in South African adults: a nationally representative study. PLoS ONE, 21 (1), [e0340695]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0340695).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to assess the associations between food insecurity, coping strategies, socio-economic status and anxiety, depression and multimorbidity in South Africa.

Methods: data from a nationally representative cross-sectional survey conducted in April 2024 (n=3171; weighted to 20,955,234 adults aged > 18 years) were used. Food insecurity was measured using the Community Childhood Hunger Identification Project (CCHIP) tool, a validated household-level measure commonly used in South Africa. Coping strategy, anxiety and depression were measured using the coping strategies index, Generalised Anxiety Disorder–7 scale and Patient Health Questionnaire–9, respectively. Multimorbidity was self-reported as ≥2 of 14 known chronic conditions. Multivariable logistic regression was used to test associations, and a generalised structural equation model examined the roles of socio-economic status and coping strategies.

Results: being from a food-insecure household more than doubled the odds of experiencing multimorbidity (OR=2.17, 95% CI 2.17, 2.19), depression (OR=2.96, 95% CI 2.95, 2.97) and anxiety (OR=2.82, 95% CI 2.81, 2.83). Food insecurity accounted for approximately 60% of the total association between socio-economic status and depression, and about 88% of the association between socio-economic status and multimorbidity.

Conclusions: food insecurity is significantly associated with adverse physical and mental health outcomes. Interventions to improve food security, especially in low socio-economic populations, should be prioritised given their associations with multimorbidity, anxiety and depression. Potential intervention effects will require longitudinal or experimental evaluation.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 December 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 January 2026
Published date: 9 January 2026
Additional Information: For open access, the authors have applied a CC BY public copyright license to any author-accepted manuscript version arising from this submission.
Keywords: Anxiety, Coping strategies, Depression, Food insecurity, Multimorbidity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508975
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508975
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: fb3364b7-4193-4433-ba90-9c96fa799406
ORCID for Olatundun Gafari: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3416-5084
ORCID for Duncan Hornby: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6295-1360
ORCID for Craig Hutton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5896-756X
ORCID for Mary Barker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2976-0217
ORCID for Shane A. Norris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7124-3788

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 09 Feb 2026 17:43
Last modified: 10 Feb 2026 03:12

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Contributors

Author: Olatundun Gafari ORCID iD
Author: Ashleigh Craig
Author: Khuthala Mabetha
Author: Duncan Hornby ORCID iD
Author: Craig Hutton ORCID iD
Author: Mary Barker ORCID iD
Author: Shane A. Norris ORCID iD

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