Clinton School of Public Service, University of Arkansas, Little Rock, AR, USA.
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Arkansas, Little Rock, AR, USA.
Ethn Health. 2023 Aug;28(6):942-955. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2023.2176828. Epub 2023 Feb 14.
U.S. Latinx/Hispanic families experience higher food insecurity rates than the general population. Few studies have examined factors that contribute to food insecurity among the Latinx/Hispanic population, and none have done so using a national dataset. Drawing from the ecological theory of human development framework, this study explores the following research questions: What micro-, meso-, and exo/macro-system factors are related to adult and child food insecurity? How do these factors compare for Latinx/Hispanic, Black, and White mothers?
This study uses data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS), a national survey that follows a birth cohort of mostly unwed parents and their children over a 15-year period. The sample was limited to Hispanic (both foreign-born and native-born), non-Hispanic Black mothers, and non-Hispanic White mothers. This yielded a final sample size of 2,636 for all mothers and 665 for Latinx/Hispanic mothers.
While micro-level factors were influential for food insecurity, they alone could not explain the variation. Social support, a meso-level factor, remained a consistently significant predictor for both adult and child food insecurity, regardless of race/ethnicity. There were also several key differences in predictors across racial/ethnic groups. Being Spanish speaking and mother's health status were only significant for Latinx/Hispanic mothers, and neighborhood support was not significant for Latinx/Hispanic mothers.
Drawing from ecological theory, our study explores the micro-, meso-, and exo-/macro-level variables that influence food insecurity. Findings suggest that access to social support is crucial for disadvantaged families avoiding food insecurity, despite race/ethnicity. Still, factors predicting food insecurity may be racialized and should be recognized as such.
美国拉丁裔/西班牙裔家庭的粮食不安全发生率高于总人口。很少有研究探讨导致拉丁裔/西班牙裔人口粮食不安全的因素,也没有使用全国性数据集进行研究。本研究借鉴人类发展生态理论框架,探讨以下研究问题:微观、中观和外/宏观系统因素与成人和儿童粮食不安全有何关系?这些因素在拉丁裔/西班牙裔、黑人和白人母亲之间有何不同?
本研究使用了脆弱家庭与儿童福利研究(FFCWS)的数据,这是一项全国性调查,对大多数未婚父母及其子女进行了为期 15 年的跟踪。样本仅限于西班牙裔(包括出生于国外和国内的)、非西班牙裔黑人母亲和非西班牙裔白人母亲。这使得所有母亲的最终样本量为 2636 人,拉丁裔/西班牙裔母亲的样本量为 665 人。
虽然微观层面的因素对粮食不安全有影响,但它们本身并不能解释差异。社会支持是一个中观层面的因素,无论种族/民族如何,它始终是成人和儿童粮食不安全的一个重要预测因素。在不同种族/民族群体中,预测因素也存在一些关键差异。讲西班牙语和母亲的健康状况仅对拉丁裔/西班牙裔母亲有重要意义,而邻里支持对拉丁裔/西班牙裔母亲则不重要。
本研究从生态理论出发,探讨了影响粮食不安全的微观、中观和外/宏观层面的变量。研究结果表明,尽管存在种族/民族差异,但获得社会支持对于处境不利的家庭避免粮食不安全至关重要。然而,预测粮食不安全的因素可能存在种族化,应该认识到这一点。