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Survey of Food Insecurity on Thirty-Four Campuses<br />

Respondents who showed signs of food insecurity in these initial<br />

questions were then asked a series of follow-up questions. Forty-four<br />

percent said that they had been forced to cut back on the size of their<br />

meals or skip meals entirely in the last 30 days due to lack of money,<br />

and 35 percent said that they were hungry but didn’t eat because there<br />

wasn’t enough money for food (see Table 3).<br />

In addition, a significant percentage reported more severe levels of<br />

food insecurity. Twenty percent of these survey-takers reported having<br />

skipped eating for an entire day due to lack of money in the last 30 days,<br />

and 15 percent said that they had lost weight in the last 30 days because<br />

they couldn’t afford to eat.<br />

Table 3: Responses to Food Security<br />

Follow-Up Questions, Last 30 Days<br />

Did you ever cut the size of your meals or skip meals<br />

because there wasn’t enough money for food?<br />

Did you ever eat less than you felt you should because<br />

there wasn’t enough money for food?<br />

Were you ever hungry but didn’t eat because there<br />

wasn’t enough money for food?<br />

Did you lose weight because there wasn’t enough<br />

money for food?<br />

Did you ever not eat for a whole day because there<br />

wasn’t enough money for food?<br />

Yes<br />

44%<br />

43%<br />

35%<br />

15%<br />

20%<br />

Note: The sample for these questions was made up of respondents who answered “sometimes<br />

true” or “often true” to one of the initial food security questions listed in Table 2.<br />

When the study looked at responses by demographic groups, the results<br />

showed that food insecurity was more prevalent among the students of<br />

color who participated in the survey. Students who identified as “Hispanic<br />

or Latino” or “Black or African American” were more likely to be food<br />

insecure and much more likely to experience very low food security.<br />

The study also found that 56 percent of first-generation students were food<br />

insecure, compared to 45 percent of students whose parents did attend college.<br />

16

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