Agarwal Sarthak, Fertig Angela R, Trofholz Amanda C, Tate Allan D, Robinson Jenna, Berge Jerica M
Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota, 130 Hubert H. Humphrey Center, 301 19th Ave South, Minneapolis, MN55455, USA.
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2022 Oct 10;25(12):1-10. doi: 10.1017/S1368980022002130.
To examine associations among neighbourhood food environments (NFE), household food insecurity (HFI) and child's weight-related outcomes in a racially/ethnically diverse sample of US-born and immigrant/refugee families.
This cross-sectional, observational study involving individual and geographic-level data used multilevel models to estimate associations between neighbourhood food environment and child outcomes. Interactions between HFI and NFE were employed to determine whether HFI moderated the association between NFE and child outcomes and whether the associations differed for US-born . immigrant/refugee groups.
The sample resided in 367 census tracts in the Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN metropolitan area, and the data were collected in 2016-2019.
The sample was from the study of families ( 1296) with children from six racial/ethnic and immigrant/refugee groups (African American, Latino, Hmong, Native American, Somali/Ethiopian and White).
Living in a neighbourhood with low perceived access to affordable fresh fruits and vegetables was found to be associated with lower food security ( < 0·01), poorer child diet quality ( < 0·01) and reduced availability of a variety of fruits ( < 0·01), vegetables ( < 0·05) and whole grains in the home ( < 0·01). Moreover, residing in a food desert was found to be associated with a higher child BMI percentile if the child's household was food insecure ( < 0·05). No differences in associations were found for immigrant/refugee groups.
Poor NFE were associated with worse weight-related outcomes for children; the association with weight was more pronounced among children with HFI. Interventions aiming to improve child weight-related outcomes should consider both NFE and HFI.
在一个种族/民族多样化的美国出生家庭以及移民/难民家庭样本中,研究邻里食物环境(NFE)、家庭粮食不安全状况(HFI)与儿童体重相关结果之间的关联。
这项横断面观察性研究涉及个体和地理层面的数据,使用多层次模型来估计邻里食物环境与儿童结果之间的关联。采用HFI与NFE之间的相互作用来确定HFI是否调节了NFE与儿童结果之间的关联,以及这些关联在美国出生的儿童与移民/难民群体中是否存在差异。
样本来自明尼阿波利斯/圣保罗市明尼苏达州大都市地区的367个人口普查区,数据收集于2016 - 2019年。
样本来自对有儿童的家庭(1296个)的研究,这些儿童来自六个种族/民族和移民/难民群体(非裔美国人、拉丁裔、苗族、美洲原住民、索马里/埃塞俄比亚人和白人)。
研究发现,生活在一个被认为难以获得平价新鲜水果和蔬菜的社区与较低的食品安全水平(P<0.01)、较差的儿童饮食质量(P<0.01)以及家中各类水果(P<0.01)、蔬菜(P<0.05)和全谷物供应减少有关(P<0.01)。此外,如果儿童家庭粮食不安全,居住在食物荒漠地区与较高的儿童BMI百分位数相关(P<0.05)。在移民/难民群体中未发现关联差异。
不良的NFE与儿童更差的体重相关结果有关;在粮食不安全的儿童中,与体重的关联更为明显。旨在改善儿童体重相关结果的干预措施应同时考虑NFE和HFI。