Department of Nutrition and Food Science, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA.
Agriculture Research Service, Food Surveys Research Group, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Beltsville, Maryland, USA.
J Nutr. 2022 Aug 9;152(8):1953-1962. doi: 10.1093/jn/nxac058.
Economic food insecurity tools are used to detect need for assistance in the general population. However, in older adults, food insecurity can also be due to factors other than economic, such as physical inability to shop or cook.
We determined: 1) the proportion of older adults in the United States who experience physical and/or economic food insecurity; 2) differences in characteristics, diet quality, chronic conditions, and depression by economic and/or physical food insecurity; and 3) the relation of physical and economic food insecurity with diet quality and with depression.
Data from adults aged ≥60 y of the NHANES (2013-2018) were used. Groups were created based on economic food security [measured using the USDA's Household Food Security Survey Module (HFSSM)] and physical food security (measured using questions evaluating ability to shop and cook). Depression, Healthy Eating Index (HEI-2015) score, and socioeconomic characteristics were compared by food security group. Rao-Scott χ2 tests were used to test for significant differences between categorical variables, and t tests for continuous variables. Associations between food security status, HEI-2015, and depression score were examined using linear regression analysis.
One-quarter (25.0%) of older adults had physical difficulty accessing food but were not living in economically food insecure households. Those who lived in economically food insecure households and also had physical difficulties accessing food had the lowest mean HEI-2015 score (51.7) and highest mean depression score (6.9); both were significantly lower than the mean scores of those who lived in food secure households (HEI-2015 = 57.3; depression = 2.1; P < 0.01).
Considering physical ability to shop for and prepare food when measuring food insecurity in older adults can help identify those who might need dietary and mental health support the most, and those who need food assistance but would otherwise be missed if only measuring economic access.
经济食物不安全工具用于检测普通人群中是否需要援助。然而,在老年人中,食物不安全也可能是由于经济以外的因素,如无法购物或做饭的身体能力。
我们确定:1)美国经历身体和/或经济食物不安全的老年人比例;2)经济和/或身体食物不安全的特征、饮食质量、慢性疾病和抑郁差异;3)身体和经济食物不安全与饮食质量和抑郁的关系。
使用 NHANES(2013-2018 年)中年龄≥60 岁的成年人的数据。根据经济食物安全(使用 USDA 的家庭食物安全调查模块(HFSSM)测量)和身体食物安全(使用评估购物和烹饪能力的问题测量)创建组。通过食物安全组比较抑郁、健康饮食指数(HEI-2015)评分和社会经济特征。使用 Rao-Scott χ2 检验测试分类变量之间的显著差异,使用 t 检验测试连续变量。使用线性回归分析检查食物安全状况、HEI-2015 和抑郁评分之间的关联。
四分之一(25.0%)的老年人在获取食物方面存在身体困难,但没有生活在经济上食物不安全的家庭中。那些生活在经济上食物不安全的家庭,同时也在获取食物方面存在身体困难,他们的平均 HEI-2015 评分最低(51.7)和平均抑郁评分最高(6.9);均显著低于生活在食物安全家庭的平均评分(HEI-2015=57.3;抑郁=2.1;P<0.01)。
在衡量老年人的食物不安全时,考虑购物和准备食物的身体能力可以帮助确定那些最需要饮食和心理健康支持的人,以及那些需要食物援助但如果只测量经济获取则会错过的人。