Cross-sectional study of food insecurity and medical expenditures by race and ethnicity.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 ETHNIC STUDIES Ethnicity & Health Pub Date : 2023-07-01 DOI:10.1080/13557858.2022.2161090
Wei-Chen Lee, Sherry Lin, Tse-Chuan Yang, Hani Serag
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Objective: Food insecurity is a risk factor for morbidity and mortality leading to high medical expenditures, but race/ethnicity was used as adjustments in the literature. The study sought to use race/ethnicity as a key predictor to compare racial differences in associations between food insecurity and expenditures of seven health services among non-institutionalized adults.

Design: This cross-sectional study used Medical Expenditure Panel Survey that collects information on food insecurity in 2016 (n=24,179) and 2017 (n=22,539). We examined the association between race/ethnicity and food insecurity status and documented the extent to which impacts of food insecurity on medical expenditures varied by race/ethnicity. We fit multivariable models for each racial group, adjusting for states, age, gender, insurance, and education. Adults older than 18 years were included.

Results: The results show that blacks experienced an inter-racial disparity in food insecurity whereas Hispanics experienced intra-racial disparity. A higher percentage of blacks (28.7%) reported at least one type of food insecurity (11.2% of whites). Around 20% of blacks reported being worried about running out of food and the corresponding number is 8.4% among whites. Hispanics reported more food insecurity issues than whites. Moreover, food insecurity is positively associated with expenditures on emergency room utilization (99% increase for other races vs. 51% increase for whites) but is negatively associated with dental care utilization (43% decrease for blacks and 44% for whites). Except for Hispanics, prescription expenditure has the most positive association with food insecurity, and food insecure blacks are the only group that did not significantly use home health.

Conclusion: The study expanded our understanding of food insecurity by investigating how it affected seven types of medical expenditures for each of four racial populations. An interdisciplinary effort is needed to enhance the food supply for minorities. Policy interventions to address intra-racial disparities among Hispanics and inter-racial disparities among African Americans are imperative to close the gap.

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按种族和族裔划分的粮食不安全和医疗支出横断面研究。
目的:粮食不安全是导致高医疗支出的发病率和死亡率的危险因素,但在文献中使用种族/民族作为调整因素。该研究试图使用种族/民族作为关键预测因素,以比较非机构成年人中食品不安全与七种卫生服务支出之间的种族差异。设计:本横断面研究采用医疗支出小组调查,收集2016年(n=24,179)和2017年(n=22,539)的粮食不安全信息。我们研究了种族/民族与粮食不安全状况之间的关系,并记录了粮食不安全对医疗支出的影响程度因种族/民族而异。我们为每个种族群体拟合多变量模型,并根据州、年龄、性别、保险和教育程度进行调整。18岁以上的成年人也包括在内。结果:黑人在食品不安全方面存在种族差异,而西班牙裔在食品不安全方面存在种族差异。较高比例的黑人(28.7%)报告至少有一种粮食不安全(白人为11.2%)。大约20%的黑人报告说他们担心食物耗尽,而白人中相应的数字是8.4%。西班牙裔比白人报告了更多的粮食不安全问题。此外,粮食不安全与急诊室使用率呈正相关(其他种族增加99%,白人增加51%),但与牙科保健使用率呈负相关(黑人减少43%,白人减少44%)。除西班牙裔外,处方支出与食品不安全有最显著的正相关,而食品不安全的黑人是唯一没有显著使用家庭健康的群体。结论:该研究通过调查食品不安全如何影响四个种族人群的七种医疗支出,扩大了我们对食品不安全的理解。需要跨学科的努力来加强对少数民族的粮食供应。为了缩小差距,必须采取政策干预措施,解决西班牙裔美国人之间的种族内差距和非洲裔美国人之间的种族间差距。
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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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