Water, food, and mental well-being: Associations between drinking water source, household water and food insecurity, and mental well-being of low-income pregnant women in urban Mozambique.

Lilly A O'Brien, Jedidiah S Snyder, Joshua V Garn, Rebecca Kann, Antonio Júnior, Sandy McGunegill, Bacelar Muneme, João Luís Manuel, Rassul Nalá, Karen Levy, Matthew C Freeman
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Abstract

Drinking water access and water and food insecurity have been linked to mental well-being, but few studies have comprehensively assessed potential pathways linking these associations. Understanding these mediation pathways is particularly important among pregnant women, as prenatal stress and poor mental well-being have been shown to negatively impact fetal development. In this study, we address this gap by analyzing the relationships between drinking water source and water and food insecurity with mental well-being amongst pregnant women living in low-income, urban neighborhoods of Beira, Mozambique. Data for this cross-sectional analysis were collected among third-trimester, pregnant women (n=740) from February 2021 through October 2022 as part of a matched cohort study. Validated, cross-cultural measures of mental well-being and household water and food insecurity were administered in the survey. Drinking water source was determined by presence of a household drinking water source on-premises. We used logistic regression to characterize the associations between drinking water source, water and food insecurity, and mental well-being and causal mediation analysis to determine mediation by food and water insecurity along these pathways. We found evidence that water insecurity (OR 1.44; 95%CI 1.02, 2.02) and food insecurity (OR 2.27; 95%CI 1.57, 3.34) were individually associated with adverse mental well-being. Drinking water source was not associated with mental well-being (OR 1.00; 95%CI 0.71, 1.39), water insecurity (OR 0.86; 95%CI 0.60, 1.24), or food insecurity (OR 1.02; 95%CI 0.71, 1.47). Food insecurity may also mediate the relationship between water insecurity and mental well-being (ACME 0.05; 95%CI 0.02, 0.07; ADE 0.04; 95%CI -0.04, 0.13). Our findings support growing literature that water and food insecurity are important to mental well-being, a key aspect of overall health. Further research is needed to confirm causality along these pathways and determine specific mechanisms through which these interactions take place.

水、食物和心理健康:莫桑比克城市低收入孕妇的饮用水源、家庭用水和食物不安全与心理健康之间的关系。
饮用水获取以及水和食物不安全与心理健康有关,但很少有研究全面评估了将这些关联联系起来的潜在途径。了解这些调解途径在孕妇中尤为重要,因为产前压力和不良心理健康已被证明会对胎儿发育产生负面影响。在这项研究中,我们通过分析生活在莫桑比克贝拉低收入城市社区的孕妇的饮用水源、水和食物不安全与心理健康之间的关系来解决这一差距。本横断面分析的数据收集于2021年2月至2022年10月期间的妊娠晚期孕妇(n=740),作为匹配队列研究的一部分。在调查中,对心理健康和家庭用水和食物不安全进行了有效的跨文化测量。饮用水源的确定是根据住宅内是否存在家庭饮用水源。我们使用逻辑回归来表征饮用水源、水和食物不安全以及心理健康之间的关系,并使用因果中介分析来确定食物和水不安全在这些路径上的中介作用。我们发现了水不安全感(OR 1.44;95%可信区间1.02,2.02)和食品不安全(OR 2.27;95%可信区间1.57,3.34)与不良心理健康状况单独相关。饮用水源与心理健康无关(OR 1.00;95%CI 0.71, 1.39),水不安全(OR 0.86;95%CI 0.60, 1.24)或食品不安全(or 1.02;95%ci 0.71, 1.47)。粮食不安全也可能中介水不安全与心理健康之间的关系(ACME 0.05;95%ci 0.02, 0.07;正面0.04;95%ci -0.04, 0.13)。我们的发现支持了越来越多的文献,即水和食物不安全对心理健康很重要,这是整体健康的一个关键方面。需要进一步的研究来确认这些途径的因果关系,并确定这些相互作用发生的具体机制。
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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