Department of Psychology, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON.
Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC.
Can J Diet Pract Res. 2021 Sep 1;82(3):125-130. doi: 10.3148/cjdpr-2021-008. Epub 2021 Apr 20.
The present study examined differences in mental health and well-being between students with and without suspected food insecurity during their transition to university. We drew on existing data from 4 samples of first-year undergraduates enrolled at 3 large universities in 3 provinces (Alberta n = 199, Québec n = 299, and Ontario n = 461 and n = 510). Students completed online surveys assessing a wide range of health-related behaviours and indicators, and students were classified as food secure or insecure based on their responses to screening questions. Mental health (depression, anxiety, low satisfaction with life) was consistently poorer in students classified as food insecure across all samples. The magnitude of mental health deficit was comparable to socioeconomic disadvantage associated with food insecurity. Students experiencing food insecurity are disproportionately launching their university careers with poorer mental health, revealing a critical point of intervention for these socioeconomically higher-risk students.
本研究考察了在向大学过渡期间,有和没有疑似食物不安全的学生之间心理健康和幸福感的差异。我们利用了来自三省(艾伯塔省 n=199、魁北克省 n=299 和安大略省 n=461 和 n=510)三所大型大学的 4 个一年级本科生样本中的现有数据。学生们完成了在线调查,评估了广泛的与健康相关的行为和指标,并且根据他们对筛查问题的回答将学生分类为食物安全或不安全。在所有样本中,被归类为食物不安全的学生的心理健康(抑郁、焦虑、对生活不满)始终较差。心理健康缺陷的程度与与食物不安全相关的社会经济劣势相当。经历食物不安全的学生不成比例地以较差的心理健康开始他们的大学生涯,这揭示了这些社会经济风险较高的学生需要干预的一个关键时期。