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美国低收入成年人在 COVID-19 大流行期间的餐厅用餐情况。

Restaurant dining during the COVID-19 pandemic among adults with low-income in the United States.

机构信息

Department of Nutrition and Public Health, Merrimack College, 315 Turnpike Street, North Andover, MA, 01845, USA; Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, 677 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.

Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.

出版信息

Appetite. 2022 Jun 1;173:105976. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2022.105976. Epub 2022 Mar 1.

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic caused widespread non-essential business closures in the U.S., which may have disproportionately impacted food consumption in lower-income communities, in part due to reduced access to healthy and affordable foods, as well as occupations that may have required working outside the home. The aims of this study were to examine restaurant dining behaviors (including drive-through, takeout, and delivery) at fast-food and non-fast-food (i.e., fast casual and full-service ['other']) restaurants and the impact on diet quality among racially/ethnically diverse low-income adults during the early months of the pandemic. Participants completed an online survey using CloudResearch regarding restaurant dining behaviors in the past week (during June 2020) and during a typical week prior to the pandemic. Diet quality was measured using the Prime Diet Quality Score (PDQS). Surveys from 1,756 low-income adults (incomes <250% of the Federal Poverty Level) were analyzed using chi-squared tests to examine differences in demographic characteristics among those dining at restaurants during the pandemic, as well as to examine differences in dining frequency compared with prior to COVID-19. Negative binomial regressions were used to examine the mean frequency of eating food from fast-food and other restaurants, adjusted for socio-demographic characteristics. This study found reductions in fast-food and other restaurant dining compared with prior to COVID-19, although overall restaurant consumption remained high with over half of participants reporting fast-food consumption in the week prior (average consumption of twice per week). Greater fast-food consumption was associated with poorer diet quality. In conclusion, while fast-food consumption was slightly lower during the pandemic, the overall high levels observed among socioeconomically disadvantaged adults remains concerning, highlighting the continued need for initiatives and policies to encourage greater access to and consumption of affordable and healthier foods.

摘要

新冠疫情大流行导致美国大量非必要企业关闭,这可能会对低收入社区的食物消费产生不成比例的影响,部分原因是获取健康、负担得起的食物的机会减少,以及可能需要外出工作的职业减少。本研究旨在探讨疫情早期,在不同种族/民族的低收入成年人中,快餐和非快餐(即快餐休闲和全方位服务[其他])餐厅的餐厅用餐行为(包括免下车、外卖和送餐)以及对饮食质量的影响。参与者使用 CloudResearch 在线完成了一份关于过去一周(2020 年 6 月期间)和大流行前典型一周内餐厅用餐行为的调查。饮食质量使用 Prime 饮食质量评分(PDQS)进行衡量。对来自 1756 名低收入成年人(收入低于联邦贫困线的 250%)的调查进行了卡方检验,以检查在疫情期间在餐厅用餐的人群在人口统计学特征方面的差异,以及与 COVID-19 之前相比,在用餐频率方面的差异。使用负二项回归检验调整社会人口特征后,从快餐和其他餐厅进食的平均频率。本研究发现,与 COVID-19 之前相比,快餐和其他餐厅的用餐次数有所减少,尽管总体上餐厅消费仍然很高,超过一半的参与者报告在过去一周内食用快餐(平均每周两次)。快餐消费越多,饮食质量越差。总之,虽然疫情期间快餐消费略有下降,但在社会经济处于不利地位的成年人中观察到的总体高水平仍然令人担忧,这突显了继续需要采取举措和政策,以鼓励更多地获得负担得起和更健康的食物。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/7db8/8885442/14c7268b89e9/gr1_lrg.jpg

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