Manitoba

Manitobans who use food banks face extra challenges if they also have a health condition

Nearly half of Manitobans accessing food banks are living with a disability or health condition, a new survey suggests. And nearly three-quarters of those polled say they can't afford the healthy food they need to manage chronic health conditions.

Nearly three-quarters of Manitoba food bank users can't afford healthy food, Harvest Voices 2023 report says

A woman with long grey hair and glasses sits at her kitchen table, with  canned goods on the shelves behind her.
Sharon McCorrister says her family of five has several special dietary needs, so affording groceries on a pension takes days of planning, mapping out where to get the best prices and when to get hampers from the Selkirk food bank. (Warren Kay/CBC)

Three ways to help CBC and Harvest Manitoba to Make the Season Kind:

  1. Donation line: 1-204-982-3581.
  2. Online.
  3. Drop off food items at Harvest Manitoba, 1085 Winnipeg Ave.

Donation phone lines will be open until 7:30 p.m. Friday and for a short time Saturday morning, from 6-9 a.m. Online donations for the campaign will be accepted until end of day Sunday.


Nearly half of Manitobans accessing food banks are living with a disability or health condition, according to new data from Harvest Manitoba, an organization that supplies food banks across the province.

Its new Harvest Voices 2023 report also suggests nearly three-quarters of food bank users can't afford healthy food, making it especially hard for people to manage chronic health conditions.

That includes Sharon McCorrister, a retiree in Selkirk who's raising two young children and a teenager, with her husband.

Everyone in the household has special dietary needs, including allergies, autism, high blood pressure and diabetes.

"So at supper time, I cook three different things; at lunchtime, three different things," McCorrister said.

She spends up to $700 a month on groceries, searching for sales and scanning clearance racks for affordable produce.

McCorrister relies on biweekly hampers from the Selkirk Food Bank for other staples, such as flour, pasta and canned goods.

"I've got to start a week ahead of time, thinking of my routes and what I'm gonna get and how much I have to spend," she said.

McCorrister's husband has diabetes, which keeps him from working, leaving the family of five without much more income than her old age pension.

A close up of a can of spaghetti sauce, with a finger pointing to the line of the nutritional facts label stating the sauce contains 5 grams of sugar per half cup.
McCorrister says her husband, who has diabetes, often eats food that contain sugar because they are cheaper than the healthier, sugar-free versions. (Warren Kay/CBC)

Their limited budget means they often go without the healthier, sugar-free and whole food options recommended for people with diabetes.

"He'll have his fruits and vegetables," said McCorrister, who said much of that food comes from a can.

"Even if it does have sugar, he'll take a chance or he'll just eat half of it to save money." 

She said the family rarely eats whole grains, which are rich in fibre and can help control diabetes. The cheaper but more highly processed white varieties of carbohydrates can send blood sugar soaring.

A scan of the grocery store shelves in Winnipeg reveals products such as whole wheat pasta and bread can cost as much as three times more than the regular, white flour varieties.

A nutritionist from the University of Manitoba says higher costs for healthy food can make managing chronic illnesses like diabetes a struggle for people living on social assistance.

A woman with long hair and glasses stands on campus of the University of Manitoba.
University of Manitoba nutritionist Natalie Riediger says managing a chronic disease such as diabetes on a fixed income and while relying on food banks would be 'almost impossible.' (University of Manitoba)

"I think it would be almost impossible to meet those needs," said Natalie Riediger, associate professor with the department of food and human nutritional sciences.

"You don't have any control when you go to a food bank," she said. "There's no way to plan, so people are victim to whatever is available."

Riediger said Manitoba has some of the highest rates of diabetes in Canada, with close to a third of residents living with diabetes or prediabetes.

The province also faces one of the higher prevalences of food insecurity in the country, and many poorer neighbourhoods are food deserts, where healthier options are often not available, even at a food bank, she said.

"Food insecurity can lead to consuming foods that individuals know themselves are not supporting their disease management," Riediger said. "So there's a lot of stigma and shame for people in that situation, trying their best to manage it."

Harvest Manitoba says it occasionally offers things such as whole grain pasta and bread, but only when those items are donated.

A big bin filled with food bank donations, including a single box of whole wheat pasta.
Harvest Manitoba says it occasionally offers things such as whole grain pasta and bread, but only when those items are donated. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

The food bank distributor says when it purchases products in bulk, it buys the white variety of carbs to make the most of its limited budget.

Harvest Manitoba said people with special dietary needs should inform their local food bank, and it'll try to accommodate them as best as it can.

Some 73 per cent of the 507 people who took part in the Harvest Voices 2023 survey said they can no longer afford healthy food, while 43 per cent said they're living with disabilities or health concerns, which in most cases limit their ability to hold down a job.

"You learn to live with it," said McCorrister, who said making her own perogies, cabbage rolls, bannock and soups is key to feeding her family on a tight budget.

"If I hadn't learned how to cook from my mom, I probably wouldn't survive today on what the prices are."

Harvest Manitoba says the province has seen a 15 per cent rise in grocery prices in 2023.

It reported a 150 per cent increase in food bank clients since 2019, including a 30 per cent spike in the past year alone.

Manitobans who use food banks face extra challenges if they also have a health condition

12 months ago
Duration 2:48
Nearly half of Manitobans accessing food banks are living with a disability or health condition, a new survey suggests. And nearly three-quarters of those polled say they can't afford healthy food.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Emily Brass is a journalist and anchor at CBC Manitoba, and host of the podcast Type Taboo: Diary of a New Diabetic. She's also worked for CBC in Montreal, Toronto, St. John's, Victoria and London, UK.