2019冠状病毒病大流行期间的大学生食品安全

IF 1.6 Q2 AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY Journal of Agriculture Food Systems and Community Development Pub Date : 2023-03-16 DOI:10.5304/jafscd.2023.122.019
F. Rafferty, T. Schusler, M. V. Valencia Mestre
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在过去十年中,大学生的食品不安全状况有所增加。2019冠状病毒病大流行带来了独特的公共卫生挑战,包括粮食不安全状况加剧。在对美国中西部一所私立大学学生的横断面调查中(N=253),我们研究了疫情期间学生食品安全状况的变化,以及食品安全变化与学生身份的各个方面之间存在什么关系。29%的回应学生表示,他们在疫情期间的粮食安全状况有所下降,总体报告的粮食不安全率上升了130.77%。大流行期间被调查者粮食安全状况的变化与以下因素相关:家庭收入(p=0.000)、因大流行而失去工作或家庭失去工作(p=0.000)、接受经济援助(p=0.006)、个人或家庭感染COVID-19 (p=0.020)、大流行期间的健康感知(p=0.000)、每天吃4.5杯水果和/或蔬菜(p=0.040)、种族和民族(p=0.042)、第一代高等教育(p=0.017)、性取向(p=0.027)、和2020年春季GPA (p=0.003)。这些结果提供了越来越多的证据,表明高等教育机构以及州和联邦政府应该加大努力,支持学生实现食品安全。在此过程中,至关重要的是要考虑与不同和交叉的社会身份相关的粮食安全差异,包括社会经济阶层、种族和民族、是否在家中第一个上大学以及性取向。我们的研究结果进一步表明,需要采取干预措施,不仅要解决粮食不安全的直接症状,还要解决使边缘化群体成员更难以获得粮食安全的结构性歧视。
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College student food security during the COVID-19 pandemic
Food insecurity among college and university students has increased in the past decade. The COVID-19 pandemic has presented unique public health challenges, including increased food insecu­rity. In a cross-sectional survey of students at a pri­vate university in the midwestern U.S. (N=253) we examined how student food security status changed during the pandemic and what relation­ships exist between changes in food security and various aspects of student identities. Twenty-nine percent of responding students indicated that they became less food secure during the pandemic, and the overall reported food insecurity rate increased by 130.77%. Change in respondent food security status during the pandemic was associated with household income (p=0.000), loss or family loss of employment because of the pandemic (p=0.000), receiving financial aid (p=0.006), individual or fam­ily infection with COVID-19 (p=0.020), perceived health during the pandemic (p=0.000), eating 4.5 cups of fruits and/or vegetables each day (p=0.040), race and ethnicity (p=0.042), first-generation in higher education (p=0.017), sexual orientation (p=0.027), and spring 2020 GPA (p=0.003). The results contribute to a growing body of evidence that higher education institutions, as well as state and federal governments, should increase their efforts to support students to achieve food security. In doing so, it is critical to consider the disparities in food security associated with diverse and intersecting social identities, including socio-economic class, race and ethnicity, being first in one’s family to attend college, and sexual orien­tation. Our results further suggest the need for interventions that not only address immediate symptoms of food insecurity but also structural discrimination that makes it more difficult for members of marginalized groups to become food secure.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
73
审稿时长
15 weeks
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