Journal Article10.1542/PEDS.2009-3146
Development and Validity of a 2-Item Screen to Identify Families at Risk for Food Insecurity
Erin R. Hager,Anna M. Quigg,Anna M. Quigg,Maureen M. Black,Sharon M. Coleman,Timothy Heeren,Ruth Rose-Jacobs,John T. Cook,Stephanie Ettinger de Cuba,Patrick H. Casey,Mariana Chilton,Diana B. Cutts,Alan Meyers,Deborah A. Frank +13 more
TL;DR: A 2-item FI screen was sensitive, specific, and valid among low-income families with young children, enabling providers to target services that ameliorate the health and developmental consequences associated with FI.
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Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To develop a brief screen to identify families at risk for food insecurity (FI) and to evaluate the sensitivity, specificity, and convergent validity of the screen. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Caregivers of children (age: birth through 3 years) from 7 urban medical centers completed the US Department of Agriculture 18-item Household Food Security Survey (HFSS), reports of child health, hospitalizations in their lifetime, and developmental risk. Children were weighed and measured. An FI screen was developed on the basis of affirmative HFSS responses among food-insecure families. Sensitivity and specificity were evaluated. Convergent validity (the correspondence between the FI screen and theoretically related variables) was assessed with logistic regression, adjusted for covariates including study site; the caregivers9 race/ethnicity, US-born versus immigrant status, marital status, education, and employment; history of breastfeeding; child9s gender; and the child9s low birth weight status. RESULTS: The sample included 30 098 families, 23% of which were food insecure. HFSS questions 1 and 2 were most frequently endorsed among food-insecure families (92.5% and 81.9%, respectively). An affirmative response to either question 1 or 2 had a sensitivity of 97% and specificity of 83% and was associated with increased risk of reported poor/fair child health (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 1.56; P CONCLUSIONS: A 2-item FI screen was sensitive, specific, and valid among low-income families with young children. The FI screen rapidly identifies households at risk for FI, enabling providers to target services that ameliorate the health and developmental consequences associated with FI.
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Citations
Caregivers' Experiences With Food Insecurity Screening and Impact of Food Insecurity Resources.
TL;DR: Screening for food insecurity in primary care was generally well accepted by this sample of food insecure caregivers and WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) was the most commonly used program to address food insecurity and infrequently utilized other food insecurity resources.
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Food Insecurity Screening and Intervention in United States Children's Hospitals.
TL;DR: Many United States children's hospitals screen for FI, but most survey respondents reported that their hospital did not conduct universal screening, and screening protocols and interventions varied among institutions.
12
Food- and health-related correlates of self-reported body mass index among low-income mothers of young children.
TL;DR: How income-related challenges regarding food and health are associated with variation in self-reported maternal body weight among low-income mothers is examined to address the associations between these strategies, food insecurity, poor health, and unhealthy weight.
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Healthy food prescription incentive programme for adults with type 2 diabetes who are experiencing food insecurity: protocol for a randomised controlled trial, modelling and implementation studies
Dana Lee Olstad,Reed F. Beall,Eldon Spackman,Sharlette Dunn,Lorraine L. Lipscombe,Kienan Williams,Richard T. Oster,S. Scott,Gabrielle L Zimmermann,Kerry McBrien,Kieran J. D. Steer,Catherine B. Chan,Sheila Tyminski,Seth A. Berkowitz,Alun L. Edwards,Terry Saunders-Smith,Saania Tariq,Naomi Popeski,Laura White,Tyler Williamson,Mary R. L’Abbé,Kim D. Raine,Sara Nejatinamini,Aruba Naser,Carlota Basualdo-Hammond,Colleen M. Norris,Petra O'Connell,Judy Seidel,Richard Lewanczuk,Jason Cabaj,David Campbell +30 more
TL;DR: A randomised controlled trial (RCT) will investigate programme effectiveness via impact on glycosylated haemoglobin, food insecurity, diet quality and other clinical and patient-reported outcomes, and a modelling study will estimate longer-term programme effectiveness in reducing diabetes-related complications, resource use and costs.
Household food insecurity is associated with diabetic ketoacidosis but not severe hypoglycemia or glycemic control in youth and young adults with youth‐onset type 2 diabetes
Lauren A. Reid,Jason A. Mendoza,Anwar T. Merchant,Marco Geraci,Beth A. Reboussin,Faisal S. Malik,Alice M. Ellyson,Dana Dabelea,Lina Merjaneh,Santica M. Marcovina,Eva Lustigova,Jean M. Lawrence,Angela D. Liese +12 more
TL;DR: The association between household food insecurity, glycemic control, severe hypoglycemia and diabetic ketoacidosis among youth and young adults (YYA) with youth‐onset type 2 diabetes is examined.
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