Household Hunger Scale
The Household Hunger Scale (HHS) is a short, experience-based food-deprivation indicator developed by FANTA and documented by Ballard, Coates, Swindale and Deitchler in 2011, designed specifically to be valid for cross-cultural comparison. Unlike longer access scales, it focuses on the three most severe manifestations of food insecurity — having no food in the house, going to sleep hungry, and going a whole day and night without eating — each with a frequency follow-up over a four-week recall. The three items are recoded into a score from zero to six and partitioned into little-to-no, moderate, and severe household hunger. Because Deitchler and colleagues validated these items across diverse settings, the HHS provides a simple, comparable measure of severe food deprivation suitable for use in food-insecure regions worldwide.
Изходен запис
Цитиранията са копирани дословно от изходния запис на метода. Те не предполагат проверка на ниво твърдение.
- Ballard, T., Coates, J., Swindale, A., & Deitchler, M. (2011). Household Hunger Scale: Indicator Definition and Measurement Guide. Washington, DC: Food and Nutrition Technical Assistance II Project (FANTA-2), FHI 360. · URL
- Deitchler, M., Ballard, T., Swindale, A., & Coates, J. (2010). Validation of a Measure of Household Hunger for Cross-Cultural Use. Washington, DC: Food and Nutrition Technical Assistance II Project (FANTA-2), AED. · URL
Подбрани твърдения
Твърденията са запазени в регистъра на доказателствата, всяко със собствена оценка.
Този изглед не измисля оценка на твърдение, когато регистърът няма такава.
Свързани методи
Генерирани от графа на методите и показани като предложени от машината връзки — не се предполага твърдение за доказателство.