Men Fei, Tarasuk Valerie
Key Laboratory of Environmental Medicine Engineering, Ministry of Education, Department of Health Insurance, School of Public Health, Southeast University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China; Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Department of Consumer Sciences, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Prev Med. 2023 Apr;169:107475. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2023.107475. Epub 2023 Mar 7.
Food insecurity, the inadequate access to food due to financial constraints, affects one-sixth of Canadian households, with substantial health implications. We examine the impact of unemployment and the mitigating effect of Employment Insurance (EI) on household food insecurity in Canada. Using the Canadian Income Survey 2018-2019, we sampled 28,650 households with adult workers 18-64 years old. We used propensity score matching to pair the 4085 households with unemployed workers with 3390 households with only continuously employed workers on their propensity towards unemployment. Among unemployed households, we also matched 2195 EI recipients with 950 nonrecipients. We applied adjusted logistic regression to the two matched samples. Food insecurity affected 15.1% of the households without unemployed workers and 24.6% of their unemployed counterparts, including 22.2% of EI recipients and 27.5% of nonrecipients. Unemployment was associated with 48% (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.48, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.32-1.66; 5.67 percentage points) higher likelihood of food insecurity. This association was significant and similar across income levels, full-time and part-time workers, and household compositions. EI receipt was associated with 23% (aOR 0.77, 95% CI 0.66-0.90; 4.02 percentage points) lower likelihood of food insecurity, but this association was only significant among households with lower income, full-time workers, and children under 18. The findings suggest a broad impact of unemployment on working adults' food insecurity and a substantial mitigating effect by EI on select unemployed workers. Making EI more generous and accessible for part-time workers may help alleviate food insecurity.
粮食不安全,即因经济拮据而难以获得足够食物,影响着六分之一的加拿大家庭,对健康有重大影响。我们研究了失业的影响以及就业保险(EI)对加拿大家庭粮食不安全的缓解作用。利用2018 - 2019年加拿大收入调查,我们对28650户有18 - 64岁成年劳动者的家庭进行了抽样。我们使用倾向得分匹配法,将4085户有失业工人的家庭与3390户只有持续就业工人的家庭按照失业倾向进行配对。在失业家庭中,我们还将2195名就业保险领取者与950名非领取者进行了匹配。我们对这两个匹配样本应用了调整后的逻辑回归。粮食不安全影响了15.1%没有失业工人的家庭以及24.6%有失业工人的家庭,其中包括22.2%的就业保险领取者和27.5%的非领取者。失业与粮食不安全可能性高出48%(调整后的优势比[aOR]为1.48,95%置信区间[CI]为1.32 - 1.66;5.67个百分点)相关。这种关联在各收入水平、全职和兼职工作者以及家庭构成中都很显著且相似。领取就业保险与粮食不安全可能性降低23%(aOR为0.77,95% CI为0.66 - 0.90;4.02个百分点)相关,但这种关联仅在低收入家庭、全职工作者以及有18岁以下儿童的家庭中显著。研究结果表明,失业对在职成年人的粮食不安全有广泛影响,就业保险对部分失业工人有显著的缓解作用。使就业保险对兼职工人更慷慨且更易获得可能有助于缓解粮食不安全。