# Nourishing Beginnings: A Community-Based Participatory Research Approach to Food Security and Healthy Diets for the “Forgotten” Pre-School Children in South Africa

**Authors:** Gamuchirai Chakona

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ijerph22060958 · International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health · 2025-06-18

## TL;DR

This study explores food insecurity in South African ECD centers and highlights the need for community-led solutions to improve nutrition for young children.

## Contribution

The study introduces a community-based participatory approach to address food insecurity and malnutrition in pre-school children in resource-poor settings.

## Key findings

- Financial constraints limit the quality and diversity of meals provided in ECD centers.
- Dietary practices are dominated by grains and starchy foods, with limited protein and vitamins.
- Parental engagement and nutrition knowledge are insufficient to support child feeding practices.

## Abstract

Adequate and diverse diets are essential for children’s physical and cognitive development, yet food insecurity and malnutrition continue to threaten this fundamental right, which remains a pressing concern in many resource-poor settings. This study investigated food and nutrition security in Early Childhood Development (ECD) centres in Makhanda, South Africa, through a community-based participatory research approach. Using a mixed-methods approach combining questionnaire interviews, focus group discussions, direct observations, and community asset mapping across eight ECD centres enrolling 307 children aged 0–5 years, the study engaged ECD facilitators and analysed dietary practices across these centres. Results indicated that financial constraints severely affect the quality and diversity of food provided at the centres, thus undermining the ability to provide nutritionally adequate meals. The average amount spent on food per child per month at the centres was R90 ± R25 (South African Rand). Although three meals were generally offered daily, cost-driven dietary substitutions with cheaper, less diverse alternatives, often at the expense of nutritional value, were common. Despite guidance from Department of Health dieticians, financial limitations contributed to suboptimal feeding practices, with diets dominated by grains and starchy foods, with limited access to and rare consumption of protein-rich foods, dairy, and vitamin A-rich fruits and vegetables. ECD facilitators noted insufficient parental contributions and low engagement in supporting centre operations and child nutrition provision, indicating a gap in awareness and limited nutrition knowledge regarding optimal infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices. The findings emphasise the need for sustainable, multi-level and community-led interventions, including food gardening, creating ECD centre food banks, parental nutrition education programmes, and enhanced financial literacy among ECD facilitators. Strengthening local food systems and establishing collaborative partnerships with communities and policymakers are essential to improve the nutritional environment in ECD settings. Similarly, enhanced government support mechanisms and policy-level reforms are critical to ensure that children in resource-poor areas receive adequate nutrition. Future research should focus on scalable, locally anchored models for sustainable child nutrition interventions that are contextually grounded, community-driven, and should strengthen the resilience of ECD centres in South Africa.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** malnutrition (MESH:D044342), food insecurity (MESH:D005517)
- **Chemicals:** vitamin A (MESH:D014801)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

74 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12193564/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12193564