Division of General Academic Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Mass General for Children, Boston, Massachusetts.
Now with University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Prev Chronic Dis. 2024 Sep 12;21:E70. doi: 10.5888/pcd21.240009.
Food insecurity is defined as inconsistent access to enough food to meet nutritional needs. Discrimination is associated with food insecurity and poor health, especially among racial and ethnic minoritized and sexual or gender minoritized groups. We examined the demographic associations of perceived everyday discrimination and food pantry discrimination in Massachusetts.
From December 2021 through February 2022, The Greater Boston Food Bank conducted a cross-sectional, statewide survey of Massachusetts adults. Of the 3,085 respondents, 702 were food pantry clients for whom complete data on food security were available; we analyzed data from this subset of respondents. We used the validated 10-item Everyday Discrimination Scale to measure perceived everyday discrimination and a 10-item modified version of the Everyday Discrimination Scale to measure perceived discrimination at food pantries. Logistic regression adjusted for race and ethnicity, age, gender identity, sexual orientation, having children in the household, annual household income, and household size assessed demographic associations of perceived everyday discrimination and discrimination at food pantries.
Food pantry clients identifying as LGBTQ+ were more likely than those identifying as non-LGBTQ+ to report perceived everyday discrimination (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 2.44; 95% CI, 1.24-4.79). Clients identifying as Hispanic (AOR = 1.83, 95% CI, 1.13-2.96) were more likely than clients identifying as non-Hispanic White to report perceived discrimination at food pantries.
To equitably reach and serve households with food insecurity, food banks and pantries need to understand experiences of discrimination and unconscious bias to develop programs, policies, and practices to address discrimination and create more inclusive interventions for food assistance.
食品不安全是指无法稳定地获得足够的食物来满足营养需求。歧视与食品不安全和健康状况不佳有关,尤其是在少数族裔和性少数群体中。我们研究了马萨诸塞州感知到的日常歧视和食品储藏室歧视与人口统计学的关联。
从 2021 年 12 月到 2022 年 2 月,大波士顿食品银行对马萨诸塞州的成年人进行了一项跨州的横断面调查。在 3085 名受访者中,有 702 名是食品储藏室的客户,他们有完整的食品安全数据;我们分析了这部分受访者的数据。我们使用经过验证的 10 项日常歧视量表来衡量感知到的日常歧视,以及经过修改的 10 项日常歧视量表来衡量在食品储藏室中感知到的歧视。使用调整了种族和民族、年龄、性别认同、性取向、家庭中有孩子、家庭年收入和家庭规模的逻辑回归来评估感知到的日常歧视和在食品储藏室中歧视的人口统计学关联。
被认定为 LGBTQ+的食品储藏室客户比非 LGBTQ+客户更有可能报告感知到的日常歧视(调整后的优势比 [AOR] = 2.44;95%CI,1.24-4.79)。被认定为西班牙裔(AOR = 1.83,95%CI,1.13-2.96)的客户比被认定为非西班牙裔白人的客户更有可能报告在食品储藏室中受到歧视。
为了公平地接触和服务有食品不安全问题的家庭,食品银行和食品储藏室需要了解歧视和无意识偏见的经历,制定计划、政策和实践,以解决歧视问题,并为食品援助创造更具包容性的干预措施。