Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2012 Jul;102(7):1346-52. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2011.300522. Epub 2012 May 17.
We sought to better understand the prevalence and consequences of food insecurity among American Indian families with young children.
Parents or caregivers of kindergarten-age children enrolled in the Bright Start study (dyad n=432) living on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota completed a questionnaire on their child's dietary intake, the home food environment, and food security. We assessed food security with a standard 6-item scale and examined associations of food insecurity with family sociodemographic characteristics, parents' and children's weight, children's dietary patterns, and the home food environment.
Almost 40% of families reported experiencing food insecurity. Children from food-insecure households were more likely to eat some less healthful types of foods, including items purchased at convenience stores (P= .002), and food-insecure parents reported experiencing many barriers to accessing healthful food. Food security status was not associated with differences in home food availability or children's or parents' weight status.
Food insecurity is prevalent among families living on the Pine Ridge Reservation. Increasing reservation access to food that is high quality, reasonably priced, and healthful should be a public health goal.
我们试图更好地了解美国印第安人有幼儿的家庭中粮食不安全的普遍性和后果。
在南达科他州松树岭保留地就读幼儿园的儿童的父母或照顾者(对偶 n=432)完成了一份关于其子女饮食摄入、家庭食品环境和粮食安全的问卷。我们使用标准的 6 项量表评估粮食安全,并检查粮食不安全与家庭社会人口特征、父母和儿童的体重、儿童的饮食模式以及家庭食品环境之间的关联。
近 40%的家庭报告经历粮食不安全。来自粮食不安全家庭的儿童更有可能食用一些不太健康的食物,包括在便利店购买的食物(P=0.002),而且粮食不安全的父母报告在获得健康食品方面遇到许多障碍。粮食安全状况与家庭食品供应或儿童和父母的体重状况没有差异。
在松树岭保留地生活的家庭中,粮食不安全现象普遍存在。增加保留地获得高质量、价格合理和健康食品的机会应该是公共卫生的目标。