Department of Biobehavioral Health, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA; Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA.
Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL; Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University, Evanston IL.
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2023 Jan;123(1):29-40.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2022.07.011. Epub 2022 Jul 21.
Food insecurity has profound nutritional and public health consequences. Water insecurity may exacerbate food insecurity, yet little is known about the association between water and food insecurity in the United States or other high-income countries.
This study aimed to estimate how tap water avoidance, a proxy of water insecurity, covaries with food insecurity; examine how the probability of food insecurity changed by tap water avoidance between 2005 and 2018; and test how the association between tap water avoidance and food insecurity differed across income and housing statuses.
This was a secondary analysis of the cross-sectional 2005-2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: Participants were 31,390 US adults 20 years and older.
The main outcome was food insecurity, using the US Food Security Survey Module.
Adjusted logistic regression models estimated how tap water avoidance was associated with the odds of food insecurity. Predicted probabilities of food insecurity over time and by income and housing status were plotted using marginal standardization.
Adults who avoided tap water had 21% higher odds (95% CI 1.09 to 1.34) of food insecurity compared with those who drank tap water. The probability of any food insecurity doubled between 2005-2006 and 2017-2018 and was consistently higher for tap water avoiders. Food insecurity decreased across both tap water drinkers and avoiders as income increased, but was higher among tap water avoiders at all income levels. Likewise, food insecurity was higher among renters than among homeowners but was higher among tap water avoiders in both housing groups.
Tap water avoidance is positively associated with food insecurity in the United States, and both insecurities have increased over time. Efforts to mitigate food insecurity should simultaneously address water insecurity issues, including tap water availability and quality, as these may be a modifiable contributors to food insecurity.
食品不安全会对营养和公共健康造成严重影响。水不安全可能会加剧食品不安全,但人们对美国或其他高收入国家水和食品不安全之间的关系知之甚少。
本研究旨在估计饮用水回避(水不安全的一个指标)与食品不安全之间的相关性;检验 2005 年至 2018 年期间,饮用水回避与食品不安全之间的概率变化;并测试饮用水回避与食品不安全之间的关联在收入和住房状况方面的差异。
这是对 2005 年至 2018 年全国健康和营养调查的横断面二次分析。
参与者/设置:参与者为 31390 名美国 20 岁及以上成年人。
主要结局是食品不安全,使用美国食品保障调查模块进行评估。
调整后的逻辑回归模型估计了饮用水回避与食品不安全的几率之间的关系。使用边际标准化绘制了随时间推移以及按收入和住房状况的食品不安全的预测概率图。
与饮用自来水的成年人相比,避免饮用自来水的成年人发生食品不安全的几率高 21%(95%CI 1.09 至 1.34)。从 2005-2006 年到 2017-2018 年,任何食品不安全的概率都翻了一番,而且对于饮用水回避者来说一直更高。随着收入的增加,无论是饮用水饮用者还是回避者,食品不安全的情况都有所减少,但在所有收入水平下,饮用水回避者的情况都更高。同样,租房者的食品不安全程度高于自有住房者,但在这两个住房群体中,饮用水回避者的食品不安全程度更高。
在美国,饮用水回避与食品不安全呈正相关,而且这两种不安全状况都在随着时间的推移而增加。缓解食品不安全的努力应同时解决水不安全问题,包括自来水的供应和质量,因为这些可能是食品不安全的可改变因素。