Division of General Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital Boston, Harvard Medical School, 300 Longwood Ave., Boston, MA 02115, USA.
J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2012 Dec;51(12):1293-303. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2012.09.009. Epub 2012 Nov 6.
To examine whether food insecurity is associated with past-year DSM-IV mental disorders after controlling for standard indicators of family socioeconomic status (SES) in a U.S. national sample of adolescents.
Data were drawn from 6,483 adolescent-parent pairs who participated in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication Adolescent Supplement, a national survey of adolescents 13 to 17 years old. Frequency and severity of food insecurity were assessed with questions based on the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Security Scale (standardized to a mean of 0, variance of 1). DSM-IV mental disorders were assessed with the World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Associations of food insecurity with DSM-IV/Composite International Diagnostic Interview diagnoses were estimated with logistic regression models controlling for family SES (parental education, household income, relative deprivation, community-level inequality, and subjective social status).
Food insecurity was highest in adolescents with the lowest SES. Controlling simultaneously for other aspects of SES, standardized food insecurity was associated with an increased odds of past-year mood, anxiety, behavior, and substance disorders. A 1 standard deviation increase in food insecurity was associated with a 14% increase in the odds of past-year mental disorder, even after controlling for extreme poverty. The association between food insecurity and mood disorders was strongest in adolescents living in families with a low household income and high relative deprivation.
Food insecurity is associated with a wide range of adolescent mental disorders independently of other aspects of SES. Expansion of social programs aimed at decreasing family economic strain might be one useful policy approach for improving youth mental health.
在控制美国青少年全国样本中家庭社会经济地位(SES)的标准指标后,研究食品不安全是否与过去一年 DSM-IV 精神障碍有关。
数据来自 6483 对青少年-家长对,他们参加了国家共病调查再版青少年补充调查,这是一项针对 13 至 17 岁青少年的全国性调查。食品不安全的频率和严重程度是通过基于美国农业部食品安全量表的问题来评估的(标准化为均值 0,方差 1)。DSM-IV 精神障碍是通过世界卫生组织综合国际诊断访谈来评估的。使用逻辑回归模型,在控制家庭 SES(父母教育程度、家庭收入、相对剥夺感、社区不平等程度和主观社会地位)的情况下,估计食品不安全与 DSM-IV/综合国际诊断访谈诊断之间的关联。
SES 最低的青少年食品不安全程度最高。同时控制 SES 的其他方面,标准化的食品不安全与过去一年情绪、焦虑、行为和物质障碍的发病几率增加有关。食品不安全增加 1 个标准差,过去一年精神障碍的发病几率增加 14%,即使在控制极端贫困的情况下也是如此。在家庭收入低和相对剥夺感高的青少年中,食品不安全与情绪障碍之间的关联最强。
食品不安全与广泛的青少年精神障碍有关,独立于 SES 的其他方面。扩大旨在减轻家庭经济压力的社会计划可能是改善青年心理健康的一种有用政策方法。