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"aliments traditionnels" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Assessing the Contribution of Traditional Foods to Food Security for the Wapekeka First Nation of Canada Robidoux MA; Winnepetonga D; Santosa S; Haman F; 34310881
HKAP

 

Title:Assessing the Contribution of Traditional Foods to Food Security for the Wapekeka First Nation of Canada
Authors:Robidoux MAWinnepetonga DSantosa SHaman F
Link:pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34310881/
DOI:10.1139/apnm-2020-0951
Publication:Applied physiology, nutrition, and metabolism = Physiologie appliquee, nutrition et metabolisme
Keywords:First NationsIndigenousPremières Nationsaliments traditionnelsautochtonesbesoins énergétiquesenergy requirementsfood securityfood systemsnutritionsystèmes alimentairescuritéalimentairetraditional food
PMID:34310881 Category: Date Added:2021-07-27
Dept Affiliation: HKAP
1 University of Ottawa Faculty of Health Sciences, 70363, Human Kinetics, 125 University St., School of Human Kinetics, Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1N6N5; robidoux@uottawa.ca.
2 Wapekeka First Nation, Angling Lake, Ontario, Canada; derekwinnepetonga@hotmail.com.
3 Concordia University, 5618, Health Sciences, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3G 1M8; S.Santosa@concordia.ca.
4 University of Ottawa, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ottawa, United States, K1N 6N5; fhaman@uottawa.ca.

Description:

The food security crisis and disproportionately high burden of dietary related disease amongst northern Indigenous populations in Canada continues to be a troubling reality with little sign of improvement. The Government of Canada is responding by developing programs to support local food initiatives for northern isolated communities. While such investments appear commendable, the impact of local food harvesting to improve food security has yet to be determined. While there are clear nutritional and cultural benefits to traditional food sources, communities face considerable barriers acquiring it in sufficient amounts because of historically imposed lifestyle changes that have increased food insecurity rates. This study responds by providing a novel multidisciplinary approach that draws from firsthand experiences working with First Nations community members in a remote subarctic region in northwestern, Ontario to estimate their community's total food requirement and the amount of wild animal food sources needed to sustain yearly food intake. This transferrable energy demand approach will be critical for policy makers to put into perspective the amount of wild food needed to have an impact on food security rates and ultimately improve dietary related diseases. Novelty: * It will provide government policy makers information about current harvest yields in a remote northern First Nation to understand the potential contribution of traditional food to improve local food security * Provides Indigenous communities a means to assess local food resources to measure the caloric contributions of traditional foods toward household food security.




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