探讨大学生食物不安全与性侵害的关系

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2023-09-24 DOI:10.1080/15388220.2023.2261361
Leah E. Daigle, Raven B. Muñoz, Katelyn P. Hancock
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Institutions of higher learning may benefit from programs to address food insecurity. Doing so may have the corollary benefit of influencing mental health and health risk behaviors in ways that could reduce sexual victimization.KEYWORDS: Sexual victimizationfood insecuritycollege studentsstress Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Respondents were asked to write in their identification if they selected the other category. Those who wrote an option that fit into one of the noted categories were coded as such, and those who were not clearly identifiable as one of these groups but noted a racial/ethnic/national group (e.g., German) were coded as Other. Those who did not wish to indicate or wrote in something nonsensical or nonidentifiable were coded as missing.2. Persons who wrote in a response that matched one of these categories when selecting “Other” were coded accordingly or in the Other category. Those who wrote in a response that was nonsensical or nonidentifiable were coded as missing. Those who wrote in a response that indicated cisgender were coded according to their response on the biological sex variable (e.g., those who indicated being cisgender and female at birth were coded as woman or female on the gender identity variable).3. Those who wrote in a response when selecting other who identified one of the categories present in this study were coded as that category. Those who wrote in a response that was determined to be made up or noninterpretable (e.g., hopeless) or who chose not to answer were coded as missing.4. When using a Bonferroni correction for planned comparisons for the effect between food security and the mediators, all significant findings remain (adjusted p-value =.004).Additional informationNotes on contributorsLeah E. DaigleDr. Leah E. Daigle is Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University. Her most recent research has centered on recurring victimization, sexual victimization of college women, and the development and continuation of victimization across the life course. She is coauthor of Criminals in the Making: Criminality Across the Life Course (2nd ed.) and Unsafe in the Ivory Tower: The Sexual Victimization of College Women, which was awarded the 2011 Outstanding Book Award by the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, and author of Victimology: A Text/Reader (2nd ed.) and Victimology: The Essentials (2nd ed.). She was awarded the 2014 Andrew Young School of Policy of Studies Excellence in Teaching Award and the 2020 Division of Victimology of the American Society of Criminology Bonnie S. Fisher Victimology Career Award.Raven B. MuñozRaven B. Muñoz is a Ph.D student in the Georgia State University department of criminal justice and criminology. Her research interests are sexual violence, victimization, and sexual violence prevention efforts.Katelyn P. HancockKatelyn P. Hancock, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice in the Department of Social, Cultural, and Justice Studies at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Her research interests are victimization of diverse groups, polyvictimization, sexual assault, and intimate partner violence. Her most recent publications appear in the Journal of Ethnicity in Criminal Justice, Journal of Interpersonal Violence, American Journal of Criminal Justice, and the Journal of Criminal Justice Education. She was the recipient of the 2020 Graduate Student Leadership Award and the 2021 Excellence in Teaching Award in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at Georgia State University. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

一项小型研究已经确定了粮食不安全与受害风险之间的正相关关系,包括亲密伴侣暴力和性暴力受害以及在家庭中经历和目睹儿童暴力。问题仍然是食品不安全是否与大学生中的性侵害有关,如果是的话,是什么机制将两者联系起来。我们使用的数据来自美国大学健康协会的全国大学健康评估,这是一个全国性的大学生样本,来调查这些关系。我们发现,低和非常低的食品安全增加了性侵害的几率,这两者都与经历中度到重度压力、抑郁、焦虑、酗酒和吸毒的几率增加有关。高等院校可以从解决粮食不安全问题的项目中受益。这样做可能会产生影响心理健康和健康风险行为的必然好处,从而减少性侵害。关键词:性侵害;食品不安全;大学生压力;披露声明作者未报告潜在利益冲突。受访者被要求在他们的身份证明,如果他们选择了其他类别。那些写的选项符合其中一个所述类别的人被编码为此类,而那些不能明确识别为这些类别之一但注明种族/民族/国家群体的人(例如,德国人)被编码为其他。那些不想指出或写一些无意义或不可识别的东西的人被编码为失踪。当选择“其他”时,在回复中填写匹配这些类别之一的人被相应地编码或在其他类别中编码。那些写了毫无意义或无法识别的回复的人被编码为失踪。那些在回复中注明“顺性别”的人根据他们在生理性别变量上的回答进行编码(例如,那些在出生时注明“顺性别”和“女性”的人在性别认同变量上被编码为女性或女性)。那些在选择其他识别本研究中存在的一个类别的人时写回复的人被编码为该类别。那些在回复中被认定是编造的或无法解释的(例如,无望的)或选择不回答的人被归类为失踪。当使用Bonferroni校正来计划比较食品安全和中介因素之间的影响时,所有显著的发现仍然存在(调整p值= 0.004)。作者简介:sleah E. DaigleDr。利亚·e·戴格尔(Leah E. Daigle)是乔治亚州立大学安德鲁·杨政策研究学院刑事司法系教授。她最近的研究集中在反复出现的受害者,大学女性的性受害者,以及受害者在整个生命过程中的发展和持续。她是《正在形成的罪犯:整个生命过程中的犯罪行为》(第二版)和《象牙塔中的不安全:大学女性的性受害》的合著者,该书被刑事司法科学院授予2011年杰出图书奖,她还著有《受害者学:文本/读者》(第二版)和《受害者学:要点》(第二版)。她被授予2014年安德鲁·杨研究政策学院卓越教学奖和2020年美国犯罪学学会邦尼·s·费舍尔受害者学职业奖。Raven B. MuñozRaven B. Muñoz是乔治亚州立大学刑事司法和犯罪学系的博士生。她的研究兴趣是性暴力、受害和性暴力预防工作。凯特琳·p·汉考克,博士,查塔努加田纳西大学社会、文化和司法研究系刑事司法助理教授。她的研究兴趣是不同群体的受害者,多重受害者,性侵犯和亲密伴侣暴力。她最近的出版物发表在《刑事司法种族杂志》、《人际暴力杂志》、《美国刑事司法杂志》和《刑事司法教育杂志》。她是乔治亚州立大学刑事司法和犯罪学系2020年研究生领导奖和2021年卓越教学奖的获得者。她是刑事司法科学学院的博士峰会研究员,并获得了南方刑事司法协会颁发的2022年杰出博士生奖。
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Exploring the Connection Between Food Insecurity and Sexual Victimization Among College Students
ABSTRACTA small body of research has identified a positive relationship between food insecurity and victimization risk, including intimate partner violence and sexual violence victimization as well as experiencing and witnessing childhood violence in the home. The question remains whether food insecurity is related to sexual victimization among college students, and if so, what mechanisms link the two. We use data from the American College Health Association’s National College Health Assessment, a national sample of college students, to investigate these relationships. We find that low and very low food security increases the odds of sexual victimization, and that both are tied to increased odds of experiencing moderate to severe stress, depression, anxiety, binge drinking, and drug use. Institutions of higher learning may benefit from programs to address food insecurity. Doing so may have the corollary benefit of influencing mental health and health risk behaviors in ways that could reduce sexual victimization.KEYWORDS: Sexual victimizationfood insecuritycollege studentsstress Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Respondents were asked to write in their identification if they selected the other category. Those who wrote an option that fit into one of the noted categories were coded as such, and those who were not clearly identifiable as one of these groups but noted a racial/ethnic/national group (e.g., German) were coded as Other. Those who did not wish to indicate or wrote in something nonsensical or nonidentifiable were coded as missing.2. Persons who wrote in a response that matched one of these categories when selecting “Other” were coded accordingly or in the Other category. Those who wrote in a response that was nonsensical or nonidentifiable were coded as missing. Those who wrote in a response that indicated cisgender were coded according to their response on the biological sex variable (e.g., those who indicated being cisgender and female at birth were coded as woman or female on the gender identity variable).3. Those who wrote in a response when selecting other who identified one of the categories present in this study were coded as that category. Those who wrote in a response that was determined to be made up or noninterpretable (e.g., hopeless) or who chose not to answer were coded as missing.4. When using a Bonferroni correction for planned comparisons for the effect between food security and the mediators, all significant findings remain (adjusted p-value =.004).Additional informationNotes on contributorsLeah E. DaigleDr. Leah E. Daigle is Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University. Her most recent research has centered on recurring victimization, sexual victimization of college women, and the development and continuation of victimization across the life course. She is coauthor of Criminals in the Making: Criminality Across the Life Course (2nd ed.) and Unsafe in the Ivory Tower: The Sexual Victimization of College Women, which was awarded the 2011 Outstanding Book Award by the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, and author of Victimology: A Text/Reader (2nd ed.) and Victimology: The Essentials (2nd ed.). She was awarded the 2014 Andrew Young School of Policy of Studies Excellence in Teaching Award and the 2020 Division of Victimology of the American Society of Criminology Bonnie S. Fisher Victimology Career Award.Raven B. MuñozRaven B. Muñoz is a Ph.D student in the Georgia State University department of criminal justice and criminology. Her research interests are sexual violence, victimization, and sexual violence prevention efforts.Katelyn P. HancockKatelyn P. Hancock, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice in the Department of Social, Cultural, and Justice Studies at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Her research interests are victimization of diverse groups, polyvictimization, sexual assault, and intimate partner violence. Her most recent publications appear in the Journal of Ethnicity in Criminal Justice, Journal of Interpersonal Violence, American Journal of Criminal Justice, and the Journal of Criminal Justice Education. She was the recipient of the 2020 Graduate Student Leadership Award and the 2021 Excellence in Teaching Award in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at Georgia State University. She is an Academy of Criminal Justice Science’s Doctoral Summit Fellow, and she received the Outstanding Doctoral Student Award for 2022 from the Southern Criminal Justice Association.
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ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
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2.10%
发文量
464
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