Fusaro Vincent, Mattingly Marybeth J
Boston College School of Social Work, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA.
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, Boston, MA, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 Feb;12(1):395-412. doi: 10.1007/s40615-023-01881-2. Epub 2023 Dec 19.
Black and Hispanic households are at elevated risk of food insecurity and insufficiency-correlates of adverse outcomes in areas such as health and mental health-relative to White households in the USA. The COVID-19 pandemic and its economic shock threatened to further exacerbate these issues. Research has identified a number of risk and protective factors for food insecurity and insufficiency. These could relate to racial and ethnic disparities in two ways-through aggregate differences in the distribution of characteristics such as educational attainment and employment or through differences in the degree of risk or protection associated with a factor. We examined the relationship between four factors-household head age, educational attainment, single mother household composition, and employment-and disparities in food insufficiency between White, Black, and Hispanic households with children during the COVID-19 pandemic to consider these pathways.
We analyzed data from the Census Bureau's Household Pulse Survey using bivariate statistics, multivariable regression, and decomposition methods to understand differences in the prevalence and consequences of underlying risk and protective factors for food insufficiency in households with children.
Consistent with prior literature, we documented higher rates of food insufficiency among Black and Hispanic households compared to White households. Differences in the distributions of education and employment accounted for a substantial fraction of the disparities in risk. Both the distribution and degree of risk associated with single mother household composition also related to disparities, but these differences were muted after accounting for economic resources. Much, though not all, of the relationship between the distributions of education and disparate risk of food insufficiency were also captured by differences in economic resources.
This study provides insight into the structure underlying racial and ethnic disparities in food insufficiency during the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting the importance of human capital, income, and assets.
在美国,与白人家庭相比,黑人和西班牙裔家庭面临粮食不安全和供应不足的风险更高,而这与健康和心理健康等领域的不良后果相关。2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行及其带来的经济冲击可能会进一步加剧这些问题。研究已经确定了一些导致粮食不安全和供应不足的风险因素和保护因素。这些因素可能通过两种方式与种族和族裔差异相关——通过教育程度和就业等特征分布的总体差异,或者通过与某个因素相关的风险或保护程度的差异。我们研究了四个因素——户主年龄、教育程度、单亲母亲家庭构成和就业——与COVID-19大流行期间有子女的白人、黑人和西班牙裔家庭在粮食供应不足方面的差异之间的关系,以探讨这些途径。
我们使用双变量统计、多变量回归和分解方法分析了美国人口普查局的家庭脉搏调查数据,以了解有子女家庭中粮食供应不足的潜在风险因素和保护因素在患病率和后果方面的差异。
与先前的文献一致,我们记录到,与白人家庭相比,黑人和西班牙裔家庭的粮食供应不足率更高。教育和就业分布的差异在很大程度上导致了风险差异。与单亲母亲家庭构成相关的分布和风险程度也与差异有关,但在考虑经济资源后,这些差异有所减弱。经济资源的差异也在很大程度上(尽管不是全部)解释了教育分布与粮食供应不足的不同风险之间的关系。
本研究深入探讨了COVID-19大流行期间粮食供应不足方面种族和族裔差异背后的结构,突出了人力资本、收入和资产的重要性。