Science, asked by pandeysurvesh616, 7 months ago

“Food shortages due to covid-19 causing breaks in our food chain. How to be

managed?”​

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Answered by aatifnasir2009
0

Answer:

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The COVID-19 pandemic is causing breaks in our food chain, resulting in shortages of products, like beef and pork, in some stores.

Scarcity of items has led some people to begin panic-buying products en masse that ended up going bad or spoiling.

Experts advise that if certain meat items are scarce in your area, now might be the time to try plant-based substitutes to relieve some stress on our strained system, and give you peace of mind about your own food security.

All data and statistics are based on publicly available data at the time of publication. Some information may be out of date. Visit our coronavirus hub and follow our live updates page for the most recent information on the COVID-19 outbreak.

The COVID-19 outbreak has caused some notable shifts in how we approach food, from what we consume and where we consume it to how it’s being produced and made available to us.

Certainly in the United States, the pandemic has played a major role in reshaping our interactions with food.

Restaurants have closed regular service in many parts of the country, while physical distancing has mandated people interact differently in supermarkets. Many places have instituted a 6-feet-apart rule while standing in checkout lines.

The pandemic has also affected what foods we even have access to.

But as the pandemic continues, what can you do about how these disruptions affect your own experience with food?

Healthline spoke with several experts who addressed how you can adjust to these COVID-19-driven changes, and contextualized just what these shifts mean for our culture as a whole moving forward.

The impact of abrupt changes to the food supply

Recently, some major meat processing plants have been forced to close — if even temporarily — due to the new coronavirus spreading among their workforce, the Associated Press reported.

This has particularly affected rural parts of the country, with 900 of the confirmed COVID-19 cases in South Dakota tied to a Smithfield Foods meat processing plant in Sioux Falls.

As with everything during this period, the closure of meat processing plants has caused some political controversy.

President Trump recently signed an executive order that mandates these kinds of plants remain open to avoid major ruptures in the country’s food supply.

Dana Hunnes, PhD, MPH, RD, a senior dietitian at the University of California Los Angeles Medical Center, told Healthline that she expects each part of the country to be affected differently by their own unique disruptions in food production.

“For example, some states may see a shortage in pork while others are seeing shortages in beef. Either way, it is tragic that hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of animals will be euthanized — hopefully more humanely than what happens in slaughterhouses,” she explained. “What a waste of resources and life.”

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