Factors associated with food insecurity among Latinx/Hispanics in the U.S.: evidence from the Fragile Families & Childhood Wellbeing Study.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 ETHNIC STUDIES
Nichola Driver, Megan Tebbe, Madeline Burke, Neveen Shafeek Amin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: U.S. Latinx/Hispanic families experience higher food insecurity rates than the general population. Few studies have examined factors that contribute to food insecurity among the Latinx/Hispanic population, and none have done so using a national dataset. Drawing from the ecological theory of human development framework, this study explores the following research questions: What micro-, meso-, and exo/macro-system factors are related to adult and child food insecurity? How do these factors compare for Latinx/Hispanic, Black, and White mothers?

Design: This study uses data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS), a national survey that follows a birth cohort of mostly unwed parents and their children over a 15-year period. The sample was limited to Hispanic (both foreign-born and native-born), non-Hispanic Black mothers, and non-Hispanic White mothers. This yielded a final sample size of 2,636 for all mothers and 665 for Latinx/Hispanic mothers.

Results: While micro-level factors were influential for food insecurity, they alone could not explain the variation. Social support, a meso-level factor, remained a consistently significant predictor for both adult and child food insecurity, regardless of race/ethnicity. There were also several key differences in predictors across racial/ethnic groups. Being Spanish speaking and mother's health status were only significant for Latinx/Hispanic mothers, and neighborhood support was not significant for Latinx/Hispanic mothers.

Conclusions: Drawing from ecological theory, our study explores the micro-, meso-, and exo-/macro-level variables that influence food insecurity. Findings suggest that access to social support is crucial for disadvantaged families avoiding food insecurity, despite race/ethnicity. Still, factors predicting food insecurity may be racialized and should be recognized as such.

与美国拉丁裔/西班牙裔食品不安全相关的因素:来自脆弱家庭和儿童福利研究的证据。
目的:美国拉丁裔/西班牙裔家庭的粮食不安全率高于一般人群。很少有研究调查导致拉丁裔/西班牙裔人口粮食不安全的因素,也没有研究使用国家数据集。本研究从人类发展的生态理论框架出发,探讨了以下研究问题:哪些微观、中观和外宏观系统因素与成人和儿童的粮食不安全有关?这些因素对拉丁裔/西班牙裔、黑人和白人母亲的影响如何?设计:本研究使用了来自“脆弱家庭和儿童福利研究”(FFCWS)的数据,这是一项全国性的调查,在15年的时间里,对大多数未婚父母及其子女的出生队列进行了跟踪调查。样本仅限于西班牙裔(包括外国出生和本土出生)、非西班牙裔黑人母亲和非西班牙裔白人母亲。这产生了所有母亲的最终样本量为2636,拉丁裔/西班牙裔母亲的最终样本量为665。结果:微观因素对粮食不安全有影响,但不能单独解释粮食不安全的变化。社会支持是一个中等水平的因素,无论种族/民族如何,它始终是成人和儿童粮食不安全的重要预测因素。在不同种族/民族群体中,预测因素也存在一些关键差异。说西班牙语和母亲的健康状况仅对拉丁裔/西班牙裔母亲有显著影响,而邻里支持对拉丁裔/西班牙裔母亲没有显著影响。结论:根据生态学理论,本研究探讨了影响粮食不安全的微观、中观和外/宏观层面的变量。研究结果表明,无论种族/族裔如何,获得社会支持对于弱势家庭避免粮食不安全至关重要。尽管如此,预测粮食不安全的因素可能是种族化的,应该予以承认。
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
Ethnicity & Health
Ethnicity & Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
42
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ethnicity & Health is an international academic journal designed to meet the world-wide interest in the health of ethnic groups. It embraces original papers from the full range of disciplines concerned with investigating the relationship between ’ethnicity’ and ’health’ (including medicine and nursing, public health, epidemiology, social sciences, population sciences, and statistics). The journal also covers issues of culture, religion, gender, class, migration, lifestyle and racism, in so far as they relate to health and its anthropological and social aspects.
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