Lambert Jennifer O, Lutz Melissa R, Orr Colin J, Schildcrout Jonathan S, Bian Aihua, Flower Kori B, Yin H Shonna, Sanders Lee M, Heerman William J, Rothman Russell L, Delamater Alan M, Wood Charles T, White Michelle J, Perrin Eliana M
Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
J Pediatr. 2025 Jan;276:114355. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2024.114355. Epub 2024 Oct 18.
To examine the association between social capital and household food insecurity among US families with newborns.
This cross-sectional analysis used enrollment data from 881 newborn-caregiver dyads at 6 geographically-diverse US academic sites enrolled in the Greenlight Plus Trial, a comparative effectiveness trial to prevent childhood obesity. Ordinal proportional-odds models were used to characterize the associations of 2 self-reported measures of social capital: (1) caregiver social support and (2) neighborhood social cohesion, with household food insecurity after controlling for sociodemographic characteristics.
Among 881 newborn-caregiver dyads (49% Hispanic, 23% non-Hispanic White, 17% non-Hispanic Black; 49% with annual household income <$50 000), food security was high for 75%, marginal for 9%, low for 11% and very low for 4%. In covariate-adjusted analyses, caregivers with a low social support score of 18 had 5 times the odds (aOR = 5.03 95% CI = 3.28-7.74) of greater food insecurity compared with caregivers with a high social support score of 30. Caregivers with a low neighborhood social cohesion score of 10 had nearly 3 times the odds (aOR = 2.87 95% CI 1.61-5.11) of greater food insecurity compared with caregivers with a high neighborhood social cohesion score of 20. These associations remained robust when both social capital measures were included in one model.
Caregiver social support and neighborhood social cohesion each appear to be inversely associated with food insecurity among US families with newborns. Longitudinal research is needed to determine the directionality of these relationships and whether improving social capital for families with young children reduces household food insecurity.
研究美国家庭中新生儿家庭社会资本与家庭食物不安全之间的关联。
本横断面分析使用了来自美国6个地理位置不同的学术机构的881对新生儿 - 照顾者二元组的登记数据,这些数据来自“绿灯加试验”,这是一项预防儿童肥胖的比较效果试验。使用有序比例优势模型来描述两种自我报告的社会资本测量指标(1)照顾者社会支持和(2)邻里社会凝聚力与控制社会人口学特征后的家庭食物不安全之间的关联。
在881对新生儿 - 照顾者二元组中(49%为西班牙裔,23%为非西班牙裔白人,17%为非西班牙裔黑人;49%的家庭年收入<$50,000),75%的家庭食物安全状况良好,9%的家庭处于边缘状态,11%的家庭食物安全状况较差,4%的家庭食物安全状况极差。在协变量调整分析中,社会支持得分低(18分)的照顾者相比社会支持得分高(30分)的照顾者,食物不安全程度更高的几率是其5倍(调整后比值比[aOR]=5.03,95%置信区间[CI]=3.28 - 7.74)。邻里社会凝聚力得分低(10分)的照顾者相比邻里社会凝聚力得分高(20分)的照顾者,食物不安全程度更高的几率几乎是其3倍(aOR = 2.87,95% CI 1.61 - 5.11)。当将两种社会资本测量指标纳入一个模型时,这些关联仍然很强。
照顾者社会支持和邻里社会凝聚力似乎均与美国家庭中新生儿家庭的食物不安全呈负相关。需要进行纵向研究以确定这些关系的方向性,以及改善幼儿家庭的社会资本是否能减少家庭食物不安全状况。