University of California, Berkeley, School of Public Health, 2121 Berkeley Way West, Berkeley, CA 94704, United States.
Stanford University, School of Medicine, 1215 Welch Rd, Stanford, CA 94305, United States.
Prev Med. 2022 Nov;164:107268. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2022.107268. Epub 2022 Sep 20.
The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated socioeconomic disparities in food insecurity. Non-citizens, who do not qualify for most publicly-funded food assistance programs, may be most vulnerable to food insecurity during the pandemic. However, no study has examined heterogeneity in food insecurity by immigration status and ethnicity in the context of the pandemic. We analyzed the 2020 non-restricted California Health Interview Survey to examine disparities in food insecurity by ethnicity and immigration status (i.e., US-born, naturalized, non-citizen) among Asians and Latinxs (N = 19,514) compared to US-born Whites. Weighted multivariable logistic regression analyses assessed the association of immigration status and ethnicity with food insecurity. Decomposition analyses assessed the extent to which pandemic-related economic stressors, including experiencing reduced work hours or losing a job versus pre-pandemic socioeconomic position (SEP), accounted for disparities in food insecurity by ethnicity and immigration status. Regardless of immigration status, Latinxs were more likely to experience food insecurity than Whites. Based on the adjusted analyses, non-citizen, naturalized, and US-born Latinxs had a predicted probability of 12%, 11.4%, and 11.9% of experiencing food insecurity, respectively. In contrast, non-citizen Asians, but not US-born or naturalized Asians, reported greater food insecurity than Whites (12.5% vs. 8.2%). SEP accounted for 43% to 66% of the relationship between immigration status-ethnicity and food insecurity. The pandemic exacerbated economic hardship, but food insecurity was largely explained by long-standing SEP-related factors among Latinxs, regardless of immigration status, and non-citizen Asians. To address disparities in food insecurity, social assistance programs and COVID-19 economic relief should be extended to non-citizens.
新冠疫情加剧了食品安全无保障在社会经济方面的差异。非公民没有资格享受大多数公共资助的食品援助计划,因此在疫情期间他们可能面临最大的食品安全无保障问题。然而,目前还没有研究从移民身份和族裔的角度来探讨疫情期间食品无保障的异质性。我们分析了 2020 年不受限制的加利福尼亚健康访谈调查,以研究亚洲人和拉丁裔(N=19514 人)与美国出生的白人相比,族裔和移民身份(即美国出生、入籍、非公民)之间的食品安全无保障差异。加权多变量逻辑回归分析评估了移民身份和族裔与食品安全无保障之间的关联。分解分析评估了与疫情相关的经济压力因素(包括工作时间减少或失业与疫情前社会经济地位相比)在多大程度上造成了族裔和移民身份之间食品安全无保障的差异。无论移民身份如何,拉丁裔比白人更有可能经历食品安全无保障。根据调整后的分析,非公民、入籍和美国出生的拉丁裔经历食品安全无保障的预测概率分别为 12%、11.4%和 11.9%。相比之下,非公民亚洲人,而不是美国出生或入籍的亚洲人,报告的食品安全无保障程度高于白人(12.5%对 8.2%)。社会经济地位占移民身份-族裔与食品安全无保障之间关系的 43%至 66%。疫情加剧了经济困难,但在拉丁裔中,无论移民身份如何,以及非公民亚洲人,长期以来与社会经济地位相关的因素在很大程度上解释了食品安全无保障问题。为了解决食品安全无保障的差异,应将社会援助计划和新冠疫情经济救济扩大到非公民。