Good Friends and Good Neighbors: Social Capital and Food Insecurity in Families with Newborns

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Jennifer O. Lambert MD, MHS , Melissa R. Lutz MD, MHS , Colin J. Orr MD, MPH , Jonathan S. Schildcrout PhD , Aihua Bian MPH , Kori B. Flower MD, MS, MPH , H. Shonna Yin MD, MSc , Lee M. Sanders MD, MPH , William J. Heerman MD, MPH , Russell L. Rothman MD, MPP , Alan M. Delamater PhD , Charles T. Wood MD, MPH , Michelle J. White MD, MPH , Eliana M. Perrin MD, MPH
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective

To examine the association between social capital and household food insecurity among US families with newborns.

Study design

This cross-sectional analysis used enrollment data from 881 newborn-caregiver dyads at 6 geographically-diverse US academic sites enrolled in the Greenlight Plus Trial, a comparative effectiveness trial to prevent childhood obesity. Ordinal proportional-odds models were used to characterize the associations of 2 self-reported measures of social capital: (1) caregiver social support and (2) neighborhood social cohesion, with household food insecurity after controlling for sociodemographic characteristics.

Results

Among 881 newborn-caregiver dyads (49% Hispanic, 23% non-Hispanic White, 17% non-Hispanic Black; 49% with annual household income <$50 000), food security was high for 75%, marginal for 9%, low for 11% and very low for 4%. In covariate-adjusted analyses, caregivers with a low social support score of 18 had 5 times the odds (aOR = 5.03 95% CI = 3.28-7.74) of greater food insecurity compared with caregivers with a high social support score of 30. Caregivers with a low neighborhood social cohesion score of 10 had nearly 3 times the odds (aOR = 2.87 95% CI 1.61-5.11) of greater food insecurity compared with caregivers with a high neighborhood social cohesion score of 20. These associations remained robust when both social capital measures were included in one model.

Conclusions

Caregiver social support and neighborhood social cohesion each appear to be inversely associated with food insecurity among US families with newborns. Longitudinal research is needed to determine the directionality of these relationships and whether improving social capital for families with young children reduces household food insecurity.
好朋友和好邻居:有新生儿家庭的社会资本与粮食不安全。
研究目的研究设计:这项横断面分析使用了来自美国六个地理位置不同的学术机构的 881 个新生儿-照顾者二元组的注册数据,这些数据都参加了 Greenlight Plus 试验,这是一项预防儿童肥胖的比较有效性试验。在控制了社会人口学特征后,该研究使用正比例-多德模型来描述两种自我报告的社会资本衡量标准(1)照顾者社会支持和 2)邻里社会凝聚力与家庭食物不安全之间的关系:在 881 个新生儿-照顾者二元组合中(49% 为西班牙裔,23% 为非西班牙裔白人,17% 为非西班牙裔黑人;49% 的家庭年收入得出结论:照顾者的社会支持和邻里社会凝聚力与家庭粮食不安全有关:在美国有新生儿的家庭中,照顾者的社会支持和邻里社会凝聚力似乎都与粮食不安全成反比。需要进行纵向研究,以确定这些关系的方向性,以及改善有幼儿家庭的社会资本是否会减少家庭粮食不安全状况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Pediatrics
Journal of Pediatrics 医学-小儿科
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
2.00%
发文量
696
审稿时长
31 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Pediatrics is an international peer-reviewed journal that advances pediatric research and serves as a practical guide for pediatricians who manage health and diagnose and treat disorders in infants, children, and adolescents. The Journal publishes original work based on standards of excellence and expert review. The Journal seeks to publish high quality original articles that are immediately applicable to practice (basic science, translational research, evidence-based medicine), brief clinical and laboratory case reports, medical progress, expert commentary, grand rounds, insightful editorials, “classic” physical examinations, and novel insights into clinical and academic pediatric medicine related to every aspect of child health. Published monthly since 1932, The Journal of Pediatrics continues to promote the latest developments in pediatric medicine, child health, policy, and advocacy. Topics covered in The Journal of Pediatrics include, but are not limited to: General Pediatrics Pediatric Subspecialties Adolescent Medicine Allergy and Immunology Cardiology Critical Care Medicine Developmental-Behavioral Medicine Endocrinology Gastroenterology Hematology-Oncology Infectious Diseases Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine Nephrology Neurology Emergency Medicine Pulmonology Rheumatology Genetics Ethics Health Service Research Pediatric Hospitalist Medicine.
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