
Food insecurity is a significant social and health issue for children in high-income countries and contributes to sub-optimal child outcomes. This scoping review examines how food insecurity intersects with the moral experiences of those involved in providing and receiving paediatric health care. The moral experiences lens has magnified the countless everyday encounters in which values and beliefs about what is ‘right’ or ‘just’ can be realised or thwarted in the context of the intersection between healthcare and food insecurity. Review findings have implications relating to the inclusion of children’s voices in healthcare settings, healthcare practice and policy design, and the development and use of FI screening tools.
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