Increasing food insecurity severity is associated with lower diet quality.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Public Health Nutrition Pub Date : 2024-02-05 DOI:10.1017/S1368980024000417
Katherine Kent, Tracy Schumacher, Sebastian Kocar, Ami Seivwright, Denis Visentin, Clare E Collins, Libby Lester
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Abstract

Objective: Food insecurity may reduce diet quality, but the relationship between food insecurity severity and diet quality is under-researched. This study aimed to examine the relationship between diet quality and severity of household food insecurity.

Design: A cross-sectional, online survey used the United States Department of Agriculture Household Food Security Six-item Short Form to classify respondents as food secure or marginally, moderately or severely food insecure. The Australian Recommended Food Score (ARFS; scored 0–73) determined diet quality (ARFS total and sub-scale scores). Survey-weighted linear regression (adjusted for age, sex, income, education, location and household composition) was conducted.

Setting: Tasmania, Australia.

Participants: Community-dwelling adults (aged 18 years and over).

Results: The mean ARFS total for the sample (n 804, 53 % female, 29 % aged > 65 years) was 32·4 (sd = 9·8). As the severity of household food insecurity increased, ARFS total decreased. Marginally food-insecure respondents reported a mean ARFS score three points lower than food-secure adults (B = –2·7; 95 % CI (–5·11, –0·34); P = 0·03) and reduced by six points for moderately (B = –5·6; 95 % CI (–7·26, –3·90); P < 0·001) and twelve points for severely food-insecure respondents (B = –11·5; 95 % CI (–13·21, –9·78); P < 0·001). Marginally food-insecure respondents had significantly lower vegetable sub-scale scores, moderately food-insecure respondents had significantly lower sub-scale scores for all food groups except dairy and severely food-insecure respondents had significantly lower scores for all sub-scale scores.

Conclusions: Poorer diet quality is evident in marginally, moderately and severely food-insecure adults. Interventions to reduce food insecurity and increase diet quality are required to prevent poorer nutrition-related health outcomes in food-insecure populations in Australia.

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粮食不安全程度的增加与饮食质量的降低有关。
目的:粮食不安全可能会降低饮食质量,但对粮食不安全严重程度与饮食质量之间的关系研究不足。本研究旨在探讨饮食质量与家庭粮食不安全严重程度之间的关系:设计:一项横断面在线调查使用美国农业部家庭食品安全六项简表将受访者划分为食品安全或略微、中度或严重食品不安全。澳大利亚推荐食物评分(ARFS;分值为 0-73)确定饮食质量(ARFS 总分和分项评分)。进行了调查加权线性回归(根据年龄、性别、收入、教育、地点、家庭组成进行调整):地点:澳大利亚塔斯马尼亚州:结果:样本的平均 ARFS 总值为 0.5,而平均值为 0.5:结果:样本(n=804,53% 为女性,29% 年龄大于 65 岁)的平均 ARFS 总值为 32.4(SD=9.8)。随着家庭粮食不安全程度的增加,ARFS 总量也随之减少。食物极度不安全受访者的平均 ARFS 分数比食物安全成年人低 3 分(B=-2.7;95%CI [-5.11,-0.34];p=0.03),中度不安全受访者的平均 ARFS 分数比食物安全成年人低 6 分(B=-5.6;95%CI [-7.26,-3.90];p 结论:勉强、中度和严重粮食不安全成年人的饮食质量明显较差。在澳大利亚,需要采取干预措施来降低粮食不安全程度并提高饮食质量,以防止粮食不安全人群出现较差的营养相关健康结果。
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来源期刊
Public Health Nutrition
Public Health Nutrition 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
521
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Public Health Nutrition provides an international peer-reviewed forum for the publication and dissemination of research and scholarship aimed at understanding the causes of, and approaches and solutions to nutrition-related public health achievements, situations and problems around the world. The journal publishes original and commissioned articles, commentaries and discussion papers for debate. The journal is of interest to epidemiologists and health promotion specialists interested in the role of nutrition in disease prevention; academics and those involved in fieldwork and the application of research to identify practical solutions to important public health problems.
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