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U.S. Household Food Security Survey Module×Reduced Coping Strategies Index×
DziedzinaFood Agriculture StudiesFood Agriculture Studies
RodzinaLatent structureProcess / pipeline
Rok powstania20002008
TwórcaGary Bickel, Mark Nord, William Hamilton et al. (USDA Federal Interagency Food Security Measurement Project)Daniel Maxwell & Richard Caldwell (CARE / WFP)
TypExperience-based household food security scale calibrated by Rasch measurementStandardized weighted index of food-consumption coping behaviors
Źródło pierwotneBickel, G., Nord, M., Price, C., Hamilton, W., & Cook, J. (2000). Guide to Measuring Household Food Security, Revised 2000. Alexandria, VA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service. link ↗Maxwell, D., & Caldwell, R. (2008). The Coping Strategies Index: A Tool for Rapid Measurement of Household Food Security and the Impact of Food Aid Programs in Humanitarian Emergencies. Field Methods Manual, 2nd Edition. Atlanta & Nairobi: CARE / WFP / Feinstein International Center, Tufts University & TANGO International. link ↗
Inne nazwyHFSSM, USDA Household Food Security Survey Module, Core Food Security Module, US Food Security ScalerCSI, Reduced CSI, WFP Reduced Coping Strategies Index
Pokrewne33
PodsumowanieThe U.S. Household Food Security Survey Module (HFSSM) is the standard instrument for measuring food insecurity in the United States, developed in the 1990s by the USDA-led Federal Interagency Food Security Measurement Project and documented in Bickel, Nord, Price, Hamilton and Cook's 2000 Guide to Measuring Household Food Security. It is an experience-based scale: a set of ten adult-referenced and eight child-referenced questions, with frequency follow-ups, that ask whether households cut back on food, skipped meals, or went hungry because they lacked money for food. Responses are calibrated with a Rasch measurement model onto a single severity continuum, and households are classified into high, marginal, low, and very low food security, the categories behind the annual national food-security statistics.The Reduced Coping Strategies Index (rCSI) is a standardized, cross-context food-security indicator distilled from the Coping Strategies Index methodology of Maxwell and Caldwell. Where the full Coping Strategies Index inventories many context-specific coping behaviors with locally derived weights, the reduced version fixes on five consumption-based strategies — eating less-preferred foods, borrowing food, limiting portion size, restricting adults' intake so children can eat, and reducing the number of meals — each with a universal severity weight. Multiplying the number of days in the past week each strategy was used by its weight and summing gives a score from zero to 56. Because the strategies and weights are fixed, the rCSI is comparable across populations and countries, making it a widely used quick gauge of food-access stress.
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ScholarGatePorównaj metody: U.S. Household Food Security Survey Module · Reduced Coping Strategies Index. Pobrano 2026-06-25 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare