Department of Nutrition and Health Care Management, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC, 28608, USA.
Department of Health and Exercise Science, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC, 28608, USA.
J Community Health. 2018 Oct;43(5):969-976. doi: 10.1007/s10900-018-0513-1.
Food insecurity means having limited or uncertain access, in socially acceptable ways, to an adequate and safe food supply. Ample evidence has identified college students as vulnerable to this problem, but little research has focused on freshmen. This cross-sectional study examined family and campus food insecurity among freshmen at a university in Appalachia. An online questionnaire contained sociodemographic items and scales that measured food security status, academic progress, coping strategies for accessing food, and social support. T-tests and Chi square analyses compared food insecure and food secure students. Statistical significance was p < .05. Participants were 456 freshmen, 118 males (26%) and 331 females (73%). Family and campus food insecurity were experienced by 32 (7.1%) and 98 (21.5%) of the freshmen, respectively, and 42.5% of those who experienced campus food insecurity believed their food access had worsened since starting college. Family and campus coping strategies, respectively, included stretching food (72.9 vs. 18.4%) and purchasing cheap, processed food (68.8 vs. 16.3%). Food secure students scored significantly higher on self-rated measures of academic progress (p < .01), and greater proportions of food secure students (60.7 vs. 43.9%, p < .01) perceived their eating habits since starting college as "healthy/very healthy," and perceived their health status as "good/excellent" (86.0 vs. 71.4%, p < .01). Students requested assistance with job opportunities (19.4%), affordable meal plans (18.4%), money management (13.3%), and eating healthy (11.2%). Findings suggest that college student food insecurity begins during the freshmen year, and that there is a need for campus and community-based interventions to increase food access among these freshmen and their families.
食物不安全意味着以社会可接受的方式,有限或无法获得充足和安全的食物供应。大量证据表明,大学生容易受到这个问题的影响,但很少有研究关注新生。本横断面研究调查了阿巴拉契亚地区一所大学新生的家庭和校园食物不安全情况。在线问卷包含社会人口统计学项目和衡量食物安全状况、学业进展、获取食物的应对策略以及社会支持的量表。t 检验和卡方分析比较了食物不安全和食物安全的学生。统计显著性水平为 p<0.05。参与者为 456 名新生,其中男性 118 名(26%),女性 331 名(73%)。分别有 32 名(7.1%)和 98 名(21.5%)新生经历家庭和校园食物不安全,其中 42.5%经历校园食物不安全的学生认为他们自入学以来的食物获取情况恶化。家庭和校园应对策略分别包括节省食物(72.9%比 18.4%)和购买廉价加工食品(68.8%比 16.3%)。在自我评估的学业进展方面,食物安全的学生得分显著更高(p<0.01),而且更多的食物安全学生(60.7%比 43.9%,p<0.01)认为他们自入学以来的饮食习惯是“健康/非常健康”,并且认为他们的健康状况是“良好/优秀”(86.0%比 71.4%,p<0.01)。学生要求提供就业机会(19.4%)、负担得起的膳食计划(18.4%)、财务管理(13.3%)和健康饮食(11.2%)方面的帮助。研究结果表明,大学生食物不安全始于新生学年,需要在校园和社区层面进行干预,以增加这些新生及其家庭的食物获取。