“…Living with food insecurity contributes to a host of poor outcomes that are not only immediate, hunger, and malnutrition, but long‐lasting, such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, anxiety, and even suicidal ideation (Abdurahman et al., 2019; Arenas et al., 2018; Gregory & Coleman‐Jensen, 2017; Hanson & Connor, 2014; Kamdar et al., 2021; Vercammen et al., 2019). For children, being food insecure is associated with depressive symptoms, reduced concentration, poor school performance, developmental delays, dysregulated behavior, more frequent illness with slower recoveries, and more emergency department visits and forgone medical care (Council on Community Pediatrics Committee on Nutrition, 2015; Hanson & Connor, 2014; Nagata et al., 2019; Thomas et al., 2019).…”