Gerber Suzannah, O'Hearn Meghan, Cruz Sylara Marie, Reedy Julia, Mozaffarian Dariush
Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts University, Boston, MA, United States.
Betty and Guy Beatty Liver and Obesity Research Center, Inova Medical System, Fairfax, VA, United States.
Curr Dev Nutr. 2023 Mar;7(3):100060. doi: 10.1016/j.cdnut.2023.100060. Epub 2023 Feb 26.
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) disrupted access to food and adequate nutrition and the types of foods consumed. However, little empiric data exists on the changes in American's food and nutrition habits 2 y into the pandemic.
To assess current and altered food choices ∼2 y into the COVID-19 pandemic in the months after historic public pandemic relief.
A national sample of 1878 United States adults balanced by age, sex, race/ethnicity, and income completed a one-time, online, semi-quantitative, 44-item questionnaire in Fall 2021 asking about the demographics, COVID-19 food choice changes (including free-text), and consumer priorities. This analysis investigates COVID-19 impacts on food security, healthfulness, and access.
More than 35% of respondents reported improved food security and >45% reported improved food healthfulness compared with prepandemic status. Improvement was reported in more than 30% of Black/African-American and Hispanic/Latinx adults, adults with lower annual income, and female sex, despite over 75% reporting reduced choice of where to eat or buy food. The pandemic offered occasion for many to improve diet, but a similar number expressed that the pandemic destabilized healthy habits.
Our novel findings suggest that by late 2021, most Americans had improved food security and food choice healthfulness, despite reduced access to food service and retail, although with worsening among a meaningful proportion of Americans as well as heterogeneity in these changes. Vigorous federal, state, city, and community responses to the pandemic may have played a role in improving the food security and food choice healthfulness during the COVID-19 pandemic. Health crises differently impact health behaviors, but when accompanied by vigorous civic and community response, food security, and food healthfulness can be fortified.
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)扰乱了食物获取、充足营养以及所消费食物的种类。然而,关于疫情爆发两年后美国人食物和营养习惯变化的实证数据很少。
评估在历史性的公共疫情救助措施实施数月后,COVID-19大流行约两年时当前和改变后的食物选择。
一个由1878名美国成年人组成的全国样本,按年龄、性别、种族/族裔和收入进行平衡,于2021年秋季完成了一份一次性的在线半定量44项问卷,询问人口统计学信息、COVID-19食物选择变化(包括自由文本)以及消费者优先事项。本分析调查COVID-19对粮食安全、健康程度和获取情况的影响。
与疫情前相比,超过35%的受访者报告粮食安全状况有所改善,超过45%的受访者报告食物健康程度有所提高。超过30%的黑人/非裔美国人和西班牙裔/拉丁裔成年人、年收入较低的成年人以及女性报告有改善,尽管超过75%的人表示外出就餐或购买食物的选择减少。疫情为许多人提供了改善饮食的契机,但也有相当数量的人表示疫情破坏了健康习惯。
我们的新发现表明,到2021年底,尽管获得食品服务和零售的机会减少,但大多数美国人的粮食安全和食物选择健康程度有所改善,不过仍有相当一部分美国人情况恶化,而且这些变化存在异质性。联邦、州、市和社区对疫情的有力应对可能在COVID-19大流行期间改善粮食安全和食物选择健康程度方面发挥了作用。健康危机对健康行为的影响各不相同,但如果伴有积极的公民和社区应对措施,粮食安全和食物健康程度可以得到加强。