Nava-Amante Pablo Alejandro, Betancourt-Núñez Alejandra, Díaz-López Andrés, Bernal-Orozco María Fernanda, De la Cruz-Mosso Ulises, Márquez-Sandoval Fabiola, Vizmanos Barbara
Doctorate in Translational Nutrition Sciences, Department of Human Reproduction, Growth and Child Development Clinics, Centro Universitario de Ciencias de la Salud (CUCS), Universidad de Guadalajara (UdeG), Guadalajara 44340, Jalisco, Mexico.
Institute of Nutrigenetics and Translational Nutrigenomics, Department of Molecular Biology and Genomics, Centro Universitario de Ciencias de la Salud (CUCS), Universidad de Guadalajara (UdeG), Guadalajara 44340, Jalisco, Mexico.
Foods. 2024 Aug 10;13(16):2507. doi: 10.3390/foods13162507.
Food insecurity (FI) expresses irregular access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food. We analyze the association between clusters of sociodemographic characteristics and FI in university students from Mexico. The Latin American and Caribbean Food Security Scale was applied, and household type, socioeconomic status (SES), and the characteristics of the head of the household, among others, were asked in a cross-sectional study. We performed Two-Step cluster analysis and logistic regression models. We included 466 university students (72.5% women, 47% with FI). We identified three clusters; Cluster-1 ( = 163) included a single-parent (37.4%) or co-resident/roommate (27%) household type, middle SES (63.2%); the head of the household is usually a woman (76.1%), single (71.8%), and with bachelor's degree (41.7%) or less educational level (46.6%). Cluster-2 ( = 144) included the nuclear (89.6%) household type, high SES (76.4%); the head of the household is usually a man (79.2%), in a relationship (99.3%), and with a bachelor's degree (63.2%) or graduate level (33.3%). Cluster-3 ( = 147) is very similar to Cluster-2. The difference is that Cluster-3 includes middle SES (70.1%), and the head of the household's educational level is high school or less (100%). Only belonging to Cluster-1 was positively associated with FI (OR = 1.96, 95%CI: 1.24, 3.09). These results show the interrelationships between multiple sociodemographic characteristics and should contribute to developing interventions that simultaneously address numerous sociodemographic factors to diminish FI in university students.
粮食不安全(FI)表现为难以定期获取充足、安全且营养丰富的食物。我们分析了墨西哥大学生社会人口学特征集群与粮食不安全之间的关联。在一项横断面研究中,应用了拉丁美洲和加勒比粮食安全量表,并询问了家庭类型、社会经济地位(SES)以及户主特征等信息。我们进行了两步聚类分析和逻辑回归模型。我们纳入了466名大学生(72.5%为女性,47%存在粮食不安全)。我们识别出三个集群;集群1(n = 163)包括单亲家庭(37.4%)或同住/室友家庭(27%)类型,中等社会经济地位(63.2%);户主通常为女性(76.1%)、单身(71.8%),拥有学士学位(41.7%)或教育水平较低(46.6%)。集群2(n = 144)包括核心家庭(89.6%)类型,高社会经济地位(76.4%);户主通常为男性(79.2%)、处于恋爱关系(99.3%),拥有学士学位(63.2%)或研究生学历(33.3%)。集群3(n = 147)与集群2非常相似。不同之处在于集群3包括中等社会经济地位(70.1%),且户主的教育水平为高中或更低(100%)。仅属于集群1与粮食不安全呈正相关(OR = 1.96,95%CI:1.24,3.09)。这些结果显示了多种社会人口学特征之间的相互关系,应有助于制定同时解决众多社会人口学因素以减少大学生粮食不安全的干预措施。