Balistreri Kelly Stamper
Bowling Green State University.
Soc Indic Res. 2018 Aug;138(3):1171-1185. doi: 10.1007/s11205-017-1700-7. Epub 2017 Jul 21.
Food insecurity-the lack of consistent access to adequate amounts of food-remains a reality for many American families. Although children are usually protected from reductions in food intake even in households with low food security, about 8 percent of all households with children also experienced reduced food intake and disrupted eating patterns. The research on child food insecurity and family structure is limited and the findings are mixed. Given the increasing complexity of families in the U.S., combined with sustained high levels of food insecurity during the last decade, a closer examination of this relationship is warranted. Using data from multiple years of the Current Population Survey Food Security Supplement (N=39,619 households) this study finds that children growing up in complex family households are more vulnerable to food insecurity, on average, than children growing up in two biological married-parent households. The results also show higher odds of child food insecurity among single mother households than among married biological or married stepfamilies suggesting a protective effect of marriage beyond economic resources.
粮食不安全——即无法持续获得足够数量的食物——对许多美国家庭来说仍是现实。尽管即使在粮食安全程度较低的家庭中,儿童通常也能免受食物摄入量减少的影响,但约8%有子女的家庭也经历了食物摄入量减少和饮食模式紊乱的情况。关于儿童粮食不安全与家庭结构的研究有限,且结果不一。鉴于美国的家庭结构日益复杂,再加上过去十年中粮食不安全状况持续处于高位,有必要对这种关系进行更深入的研究。本研究使用了多年《当前人口调查粮食安全补充问卷》的数据(N = 39,619户家庭),发现与在双亲亲生父母家庭中成长的儿童相比,在复杂家庭中成长的儿童平均而言更容易面临粮食不安全问题。结果还显示,单亲母亲家庭中的儿童粮食不安全几率高于已婚亲生父母家庭或已婚继亲家庭,这表明婚姻除了经济资源之外还具有保护作用。