Divisions of General Pediatrics (CJ Bottino and JE Cox); Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital; and Harvard Medical School (CJ Bottino, EW Fleegler, JE Cox, and ET Rhodes) Boston, Mass.
Emergency Medicine (EW Fleegler); Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital; and Harvard Medical School (CJ Bottino, EW Fleegler, JE Cox, and ET Rhodes) Boston, Mass.
Acad Pediatr. 2019 Nov-Dec;19(8):891-898. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2019.04.004. Epub 2019 Apr 13.
To examine associations between housing instability and poor diet quality in a sample of urban parents and children.
Cross-sectional study of 340 parent/guardian-child dyads visiting a pediatric primary care center in Boston, Massachusetts. The parent/guardian (hereafter, parent) completed 2 Harvard Service Food Frequency Questionnaires, one regarding their own dietary intake and one regarding their child's intake, and an assessment of health-related social needs. Diet quality was measured using the Healthy Eating Index-2010 (HEI-2010; score range 0-100). Housing instability was defined as: 1) homeless or in sheltered housing, 2) doubled up with another family, 3) utilities threatened or shut off, or 4) concerned about eviction. Multivariable logistic regression was used to measure associations between unstable housing and lowest-quartile HEI-2010 scores, adjusting for parent age, race/ethnicity, education, income, and child age.
Median (interquartile range) parent and child HEI-2010 scores were 63.8 (56.3-70.8) and 59.0 (54.2-64.7), respectively. Housing instability was found in 136 dyads (40%). In multivariable analysis, it was associated with increased odds of lowest-quartile total parent HEI-2010 scores (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.9; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 1.1-3.5) but not child scores (aOR, 1.4; 95% CI, 0.8-2.5). It also was associated with increased odds of lowest-quartile parent HEI-2010 dietary component scores for Total vegetables and Greens and beans (aOR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.1-3.7 and aOR, 2.5; 95% CI, 1.3-4.8, respectively).
In this urban primary care population, housing instability is associated with lower diet quality scores for parents but not children. Lower vegetable consumption appears to drive this association.
在一个城市家长和儿童样本中,研究住房不稳定与不良饮食质量之间的关联。
对马萨诸塞州波士顿一家儿科初级保健中心的 340 对家长/监护人-儿童进行横断面研究。家长(以下简称家长)完成了两份哈佛服务食品频率调查问卷,一份是关于他们自己的饮食摄入,一份是关于他们孩子的饮食摄入,以及一份关于健康相关社会需求的评估。饮食质量使用健康饮食指数-2010(HEI-2010;得分范围 0-100)进行测量。住房不稳定定义为:1)无家可归或住在收容所,2)与另一个家庭合住,3)水电费受到威胁或关闭,或 4)担心被驱逐。使用多变量逻辑回归来衡量不稳定住房与最低四分位 HEI-2010 评分之间的关联,调整家长年龄、种族/族裔、教育、收入和儿童年龄。
中位数(四分位距)家长和儿童 HEI-2010 评分分别为 63.8(56.3-70.8)和 59.0(54.2-64.7)。在 136 对夫妇中发现住房不稳定(40%)。在多变量分析中,它与最低四分位父母总 HEI-2010 评分的更高几率相关(调整后的优势比[aOR],1.9;95%置信区间[95%CI],1.1-3.5),但与儿童评分无关(aOR,1.4;95%CI,0.8-2.5)。它还与父母 HEI-2010 饮食成分评分的最低四分位总蔬菜和 Greens and beans 评分的更高几率相关(aOR,2.0;95%CI,1.1-3.7 和 aOR,2.5;95%CI,1.3-4.8,分别)。
在这个城市的初级保健人群中,住房不稳定与父母而非儿童的饮食质量评分较低有关。蔬菜摄入量较低似乎是导致这种关联的原因。