Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2022 Oct;122(10):1885-1892. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2022.04.015. Epub 2022 May 20.
Household food insecurity persists in the United States and has important implications for health and well-being. Food insecurity in female-identified caregivers is particularly concerning, given its association with their mental health and adverse health outcomes for their children. Food insecurity is associated with disordered eating but, to our knowledge, no prior studies have examined an association between food insecurity and food addiction.
Our aim was to examine whether food insecurity is associated with higher food addiction symptom endorsement in low-income female adults.
Secondary analysis of baseline data from a quasi-experimental study of a mindfulness-based intervention on gestational weight gain among low-income pregnant individuals and an observational study of low-income families.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: Participants in study 1 (n = 208) were English-speaking, low-income pregnant individuals with overweight or obesity, recruited in California from 2011 to 2013. Participants in study 2 (n = 181) were English-speaking, low-income female caregivers for children aged 8 through 10 years, recruited in Michigan from 2018 to 2019. Both studies recruited participants from community health clinics, social service agencies, and online advertisements.
The primary outcome measure was food addiction symptoms, assessed by the Yale Food Addiction Scale.
Multivariate Poisson regression was used to examine the association between household food insecurity and food addiction symptoms in each sample, adjusted for sociodemographic characteristics.
In study 1, pregnant individuals in food-insecure households reported 21% higher food addiction symptoms than pregnant individuals in food-secure households (incidence rate ratio 1.21; 95% CI 1.00 to 1.47; P = .047). In study 2, caregivers in food-insecure households had 56% higher food addiction symptoms than caregivers in food-secure households (incidence rate ratio 1.56; 95% CI 1.01 to 2.40; P = .045).
These findings provide preliminary support for a relationship between household food insecurity and food addiction. Future research should examine potential mechanisms and whether interventions to reduce food insecurity lower risk of food addiction.
美国家庭的粮食不安全问题仍然存在,这对健康和福祉有着重要影响。女性照顾者的粮食不安全问题尤为令人担忧,因为这与她们的心理健康以及子女的不良健康结果有关。粮食不安全与饮食失调有关,但据我们所知,此前没有研究调查粮食不安全与食物成瘾之间的关系。
本研究旨在检验粮食不安全是否与低收入成年女性中更高的食物成瘾症状有关。
对一项正念干预妊娠期增重的准实验研究和一项低收入家庭观察性研究的基线数据进行二次分析。
参与者/设置:研究 1(n=208)的参与者为英语为母语、超重或肥胖的低收入孕妇,于 2011 年至 2013 年在加利福尼亚州从社区健康诊所、社会服务机构和在线广告中招募。研究 2(n=181)的参与者为英语为母语、8 至 10 岁儿童的低收入女性照顾者,于 2018 年至 2019 年在密歇根州从社区健康诊所、社会服务机构和在线广告中招募。
主要结局测量指标为食物成瘾症状,采用耶鲁食物成瘾量表进行评估。
采用多变量泊松回归检验每个样本中家庭粮食不安全与食物成瘾症状之间的关系,调整了社会人口统计学特征。
在研究 1 中,来自粮食不安全家庭的孕妇报告的食物成瘾症状比来自粮食安全家庭的孕妇高 21%(发病率比 1.21;95%CI 1.00 至 1.47;P=0.047)。在研究 2 中,来自粮食不安全家庭的照顾者的食物成瘾症状比来自粮食安全家庭的照顾者高 56%(发病率比 1.56;95%CI 1.01 至 2.40;P=0.045)。
这些发现初步支持家庭粮食不安全与食物成瘾之间存在关系。未来的研究应该检验潜在的机制,以及减少粮食不安全的干预措施是否会降低食物成瘾的风险。