Islam Jessica Y, Awan Iman, Kapadia Farzana
Cancer Epidemiology Program, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute, Tampa, Florida, USA.
Morsani College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA.
Health Equity. 2022 Jun 24;6(1):435-447. doi: 10.1089/heq.2021.0179. eCollection 2022.
The COVID-19 pandemic has adversely impacted the financial and mental well-being of U.S. adults, however, Asian American (AA)-specific data are lacking, particularly disaggregated by AA ethnicity. Our objective was to evaluate food insecurity (FI), financial hardship, and mental health among disaggregated AA ethnic groups during the COVID-19 pandemic.
We used data from the COVID-19 Household Impact Survey, a sample of 10,760 U.S. adults weighted to reflect the U.S. population (. AA ethnic categories were based on self-report (=312, 5.1%; ) and provided as follows: Chinese American, South Asian, Filipino+Vietnamese, and Japanese+Korean. We estimated the prevalence of FI and financial hardship across AA ethnic categories. We estimated the demographic determinants of FI, including financial hardship, among AA adults using multivariable Poisson regression. We calculated the prevalence of mental health symptoms among food-insecure AA adults, as well as among AA adults experiencing both FI and financial hardship.
Overall, the prevalence of FI and financial hardship among AA adults was highest among Filipino+Vietnamese adults (52.9-24.5%) and lowest among Japanese+Korean adults (13.9-8.6%). Determinants of FI among AA adults included Filipino+Vietnamese ethnicity (adjusted prevalence ratios [aPR]: 2.81, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.49-5.29), being widowed/divorced/separated (aPR: 3.14, 95% CI: 1.37-7.23), high school graduate only (aPR: 3.46, 95% CI: 1.96-6.11), having low income <$30,000 (aPR: 2.54, 95% CI: 1.27-5.06), and living in rural areas (aPR: 7.65, 95% CI: 1.17-50.14). Eighty-one percent and 63% of AA adults with anxiety and hopelessness at least 3-7 days/week, respectively, were food insecure and experiencing financial hardship.
Disparities exist in FI and financial hardship among AA adults, particularly Filipino+Vietnamese adults, and are associated with increased self-reporting of feelings of anxiety and hopelessness.
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行对美国成年人的经济状况和心理健康产生了不利影响,然而,缺乏针对亚裔美国人(AA)的具体数据,特别是按亚裔美国人种族分类的数据。我们的目标是评估COVID-19大流行期间不同亚裔美国人种族群体中的粮食不安全(FI)、经济困难和心理健康状况。
我们使用了COVID-19家庭影响调查的数据,该样本包含10760名美国成年人,经加权以反映美国人口情况。亚裔美国人种族类别基于自我报告(n = 312,5.1%),具体如下:华裔美国人、南亚人、菲律宾裔+越南裔以及日裔+韩裔。我们估计了不同亚裔美国人种族类别中粮食不安全和经济困难的患病率。我们使用多变量泊松回归估计了亚裔美国成年人中粮食不安全的人口统计学决定因素,包括经济困难。我们计算了粮食不安全的亚裔美国成年人以及同时经历粮食不安全和经济困难的亚裔美国成年人中心理健康症状的患病率。
总体而言,亚裔美国成年人中粮食不安全和经济困难的患病率在菲律宾裔+越南裔成年人中最高(52.9%-24.5%),在日裔+韩裔成年人中最低(13.9%-8.6%)。亚裔美国成年人中粮食不安全的决定因素包括菲律宾裔+越南裔种族(调整患病率比[aPR]:2.81,95%置信区间[CI]:1.49-5.29)、丧偶/离婚/分居(aPR:3.14,95% CI:1.37-7.23)、仅为高中毕业生(aPR:3.46,95% CI:1.96-6.11)、收入低于30000美元(aPR:2.54,95% CI:1.27-5.06)以及居住在农村地区(aPR:7.65,95% CI:1.17-50.14)。每周至少3-7天感到焦虑和绝望的亚裔美国成年人中,分别有81%和63%的人粮食不安全且面临经济困难。
亚裔美国成年人在粮食不安全和经济困难方面存在差异,尤其是菲律宾裔+越南裔成年人,并且这些差异与焦虑和绝望情绪的自我报告增加有关。