Department of Pediatrics (KS Cain, SC Meyer, E Cummer, KK Patel, K Montez, D Palakshappa, and CL Brown), Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC.
Clinical and Translational Science Institute (NJ Casacchia), Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC.
Acad Pediatr. 2022 Sep-Oct;22(7):1105-1114. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2022.04.010. Epub 2022 May 13.
Food insecurity affects 13.7 million US households and is linked to poor mental health. Families shield children from food insecurity by sacrificing their nutritional needs, suggesting parents and children experience food insecurity differentially.
To identify the associations of food insecurity and mental health outcomes in parents and children DATA SOURCES: PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and PsycInfo STUDY ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: We included original research published in English from January 1990 to June 2020 that examined associations between food insecurity and mental health in children or parents/guardians in the United States.
Two reviewers screened studies for inclusion. Data extraction was completed by one reviewer and checked by a second. Bias and confounding were assessed using the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality RTI Item Bank. Studies were synthesized qualitatively, grouped by mental health outcome, and patterns were assessed. Meta-analyses were not performed due to high variability between studies.
We included 108 studies, assessing 250,553 parents and 203,822 children in total. Most studies showed a significant association between food insecurity and parental depression, anxiety, and stress, and between food insecurity and child depression, externalizing/internalizing behaviors, and hyperactivity.
Most studies were cross-sectional and many were medium- or high-risk for bias or confounding.
Food insecurity is significantly associated with various mental health outcomes in both parents and children. The rising prevalence of food insecurity and mental health problems make it imperative that effective public health and policy interventions address both problems.
美国有 1370 万户家庭面临粮食不安全问题,这与心理健康状况不佳有关。为了避免孩子感受到粮食不安全,这些家庭往往会牺牲孩子的营养需求,这表明父母和孩子对粮食不安全的体验是不同的。
确定粮食不安全与美国家庭中父母和儿童心理健康结果之间的关联。
PubMed、Embase、Web of Science 和 PsycInfo。
我们纳入了 1990 年 1 月至 2020 年 6 月期间以英文发表的原始研究,这些研究在美国考察了粮食不安全与儿童或父母/监护人心理健康之间的关联。
两名审查员筛选符合纳入标准的研究。由一名审查员进行数据提取,另一名审查员进行核对。使用医疗保健研究与质量机构 RTI 项目库评估偏倚和混杂。定性综合研究,根据心理健康结果进行分组,并评估模式。由于研究间存在高度变异性,因此未进行荟萃分析。
我们纳入了 108 项研究,总共评估了 250553 名父母和 203822 名儿童。大多数研究表明,粮食不安全与父母的抑郁、焦虑和压力,以及粮食不安全与儿童的抑郁、外化/内化行为和多动之间存在显著关联。
大多数研究为横断面研究,许多研究存在中高度偏倚或混杂风险。
粮食不安全与父母和儿童的各种心理健康结果显著相关。粮食不安全和心理健康问题的高发率使得制定有效的公共卫生和政策干预措施来解决这两个问题变得势在必行。