Suppr超能文献

取暖还是吃饭:低收入家庭能源援助计划与3岁以下儿童的营养和健康风险

Heat or eat: the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program and nutritional and health risks among children less than 3 years of age.

作者信息

Frank Deborah A, Neault Nicole B, Skalicky Anne, Cook John T, Wilson Jacqueline D, Levenson Suzette, Meyers Alan F, Heeren Timothy, Cutts Diana B, Casey Patrick H, Black Maureen M, Berkowitz Carol

机构信息

Department of Pediatrics, Boston Medical Center, 725 Massachusetts Ave, Mezzanine SW, Boston, MA 02118, USA.

出版信息

Pediatrics. 2006 Nov;118(5):e1293-302. doi: 10.1542/peds.2005-2943.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Public funding for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program has never been sufficient to serve more than a small minority of income-eligible households. Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program funding has not increased with recent rapidly rising energy costs, harsh winter conditions, or higher child poverty rates. Although a national performance goal for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program is to increase the percentage of recipient households having > or = 1 member < or = 5 years of age, the association of income-eligible households' receipt of the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program with indicators of well-being in young children has not been evaluated previously. The goal of the current study was to evaluate the association between a family's participation or nonparticipation in the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program and the anthropometric status and health of their young children.

METHODS

In the ongoing Children's Sentinel Nutrition Assessment Project from June 1998 through December 2004, caregivers with children < 3 years of age in 2 emergency departments and 3 primary care clinics in 5 urban sites participated in cross-sectional surveys regarding household demographics, child's lifetime history of hospitalizations, and, for the past 12 months, household public assistance program participation and household food insecurity, measured by the US Food Security Scale. This scale, in accordance with established procedures, classifies households as food insecure if they report that they cannot afford enough nutritious food for all of the members to lead active, healthy lives. On the day of the interview, children's weight, length, and whether the children were admitted acutely to the hospital from the emergency departments were documented. The study sample consisted only of Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program income-eligible renter households without private insurance who also participated in > or = 1 other means-tested program.

RESULTS

In this sample of 7074 caregivers, 16% of families received the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, similar to the national rate of 17%. Caregivers who received the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program were more likely to be single (63% vs 54%), US born (77% vs 68%), and older (mother's mean age: 28.1 vs 26.7 years) but were less likely to be employed (44% vs 47%). Households who received the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program were more likely to receive Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (85% vs 80%), Supplemental Security Income (13% vs 9%), Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (38% vs 23%), and food stamps (59% vs 37%) and to live in subsidized housing (38% vs 19%) compared with nonrecipients. Children in families participating in the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program were older than children in nonparticipating families (13.6 vs 12.5 months), were less likely to be uninsured (5% vs 9%), and were more likely to have had a low birth weight < or = 2500 g (17% vs 14%). Families participating in the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program reported more household food insecurity (24% vs 20%) There were no significant group differences between recipients and nonrecipients in caregiver's education or child's gender. After controlling for these potentially confounding variables, including receipt of other means-tested programs, compared with children in recipient households, those in nonrecipient households had greater adjusted odds of being at aggregate nutritional risk for growth problems, defined as children with weight-for-age below the 5th percentile or weight-for-height below the 10th percentile, with significantly lower mean weight-for-age z scores calculated from age- and gender-specific values from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2000 reference data. However, in adjusted analyses, children aged 2 to 3 years in recipient households were not more likely to be overweight (BMI > 95th percentile) than those in nonrecipient households. Rates of age-adjusted lifetime hospitalization excluding birth and the day of the interview did not differ between Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program recipient groups. Among the 4445 of 7074 children evaluated in the 2 emergency departments, children from eligible households not receiving the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program had greater adjusted odds than those in recipient households of acute hospital admission on the day of the interview.

CONCLUSIONS

Even within a low-income renter sample, Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program benefits seem to reach families at the highest social and medical risk with more food insecurity and higher rates of low birth-weight children. Nevertheless, after adjustment for differences in background risk, living in a household receiving the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program is associated with less anthropometric evidence of undernutrition, no evidence of increased overweight, and lower odds of acute hospitalization from an emergency department visit among young children in low-income renter households compared with children in comparable households not receiving the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program. The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program in many states shuts down early each winter when their funding is exhausted. From a clinical perspective, pediatric health providers caring for children from impoverished families should consider encouraging families of these children to apply for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program early in the season before funding is depleted. From a public policy perspective, although this cross-sectional study design can only demonstrate associations and not causation, these findings suggest that, particularly as fuel costs and children's poverty rates increase, expanding the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program funding and meeting the national Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program performance goal of increasing the percentage of recipient households with young children might potentially benefit such children's growth and health.

摘要

目标

低收入家庭能源援助计划的公共资金从未足以服务超过一小部分符合收入条件的家庭。随着近期能源成本迅速上涨、冬季条件恶劣或儿童贫困率上升,低收入家庭能源援助计划的资金并未增加。尽管低收入家庭能源援助计划的一项全国性绩效目标是提高有1名及以上年龄小于或等于5岁成员的受助家庭比例,但此前尚未评估符合收入条件的家庭获得低收入家庭能源援助计划与幼儿福祉指标之间的关联。本研究的目的是评估家庭参与或未参与低收入家庭能源援助计划与其幼儿的人体测量状况和健康之间的关联。

方法

在1998年6月至2004年12月进行的儿童哨兵营养评估项目中,来自5个城市地区2个急诊科和3个初级保健诊所的有3岁以下儿童的照料者参与了关于家庭人口统计学、儿童住院史以及过去12个月家庭公共援助计划参与情况和家庭粮食不安全状况的横断面调查,家庭粮食不安全状况通过美国粮食安全量表进行测量。根据既定程序,如果家庭报告称他们无法为所有成员提供足够的营养食品以过上积极、健康的生活,则将其归类为粮食不安全家庭。在访谈当天,记录儿童的体重、身长以及儿童是否从急诊科急性入院。研究样本仅包括符合低收入家庭能源援助计划收入条件且没有私人保险的租房家庭,这些家庭还参与了至少1项其他经济状况调查项目。

结果

在这个由7074名照料者组成的样本中,16%的家庭获得了低收入家庭能源援助计划,与全国17%的比例相近。获得低收入家庭能源援助计划的照料者更有可能是单身(63%对54%)、美国出生(77%对68%)且年龄较大(母亲平均年龄:28.1岁对26.7岁),但就业可能性较小(44%对47%)。与未获得援助的家庭相比,获得低收入家庭能源援助计划的家庭更有可能获得妇女、婴儿和儿童补充营养计划(85%对80%)、补充保障收入(13%对9%)、贫困家庭临时援助(38%对23%)和食品券(59%对37%),并且更有可能居住在补贴住房中(38%对19%)。参与低收入家庭能源援助计划家庭的儿童比未参与家庭的儿童年龄更大(13.6个月对12.5个月),未参保的可能性更小(5%对9%),出生体重小于或等于2500克的可能性更大(17%对14%)。参与低收入家庭能源援助计划的家庭报告的家庭粮食不安全状况更多(24%对20%)。在照料者的教育程度或儿童性别方面,受助家庭和未受助家庭之间没有显著的组间差异。在控制了这些潜在的混杂变量,包括获得其他经济状况调查项目之后,与受助家庭的儿童相比,未受助家庭的儿童出现生长问题总体营养风险的调整后几率更高,生长问题定义为年龄别体重低于第5百分位数或身高别体重低于第10百分位数的儿童,根据疾病控制和预防中心2000年参考数据中按年龄和性别划分的特定值计算出的平均年龄别体重z分数显著更低。然而,在调整分析中,受助家庭中2至3岁的儿童超重(BMI大于第95百分位数)的可能性并不比未受助家庭的儿童更高。在排除出生和访谈当天的年龄调整后终身住院率在低收入家庭能源援助计划受助组之间没有差异。在7074名在2个急诊科接受评估的儿童中,4445名儿童中,未获得低收入家庭能源援助计划的符合条件家庭的儿童在访谈当天急性入院的调整后几率比受助家庭的儿童更高。

结论

即使在低收入租房者样本中,低收入家庭能源援助计划的福利似乎惠及了社会和医疗风险最高的家庭,这些家庭粮食不安全状况更多,低出生体重儿童比例更高。然而,在调整背景风险差异后,与未获得低收入家庭能源援助计划的可比家庭中的儿童相比,生活在获得该计划援助家庭中的低收入租房家庭幼儿出现营养不良的人体测量证据更少,没有超重增加的证据,且因急诊就诊而急性住院的几率更低。许多州的低收入家庭能源援助计划在每年冬季早期资金耗尽时就会停止。从临床角度来看,照顾贫困家庭儿童的儿科健康提供者应考虑鼓励这些儿童的家庭在季节早期资金耗尽之前尽早申请低收入家庭能源援助计划。从公共政策角度来看,尽管这种横断面研究设计只能证明关联而非因果关系,但这些发现表明,特别是随着燃料成本和儿童贫困率上升,扩大低收入家庭能源援助计划的资金并实现全国低收入家庭能源援助计划提高有幼儿受助家庭比例的绩效目标可能会使这些儿童的生长和健康受益。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验