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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Bidirectional processes linking social determinants of health and pediatric sickle cell anemia management: A qualitative study.
Kristin A. Long,Ariel O. Blakey,Christina M. Amaro,Jenna Sandler Eilenberg,Annelise Brochier,Arvin Garg,Mari-Lynn Drainoni,Farzana Pashankar,Erica B. Esrick,Patricia L. Kavanagh +9 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the impact of adverse social determinants of health (SDoH) on children with sickle cell anemia (SCA) management and identified ways to mitigate deleterious effects of adverse SDoH on SCA management.
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A Missed Opportunity? Meal Provision in Early Childhood Education and Care Services in the Context of Socioeconomic Disadvantage
Bonnie Searle,Sally Staton,Robyn Littlewood,O. Bayliss,K. Thorpe +4 more
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Methods for Assessing Health Outcomes Associated with Food Insecurity in the US College Student Population: A Narrative Review.
Marcela D Radtke,Francene M Steinberg,Rachel E. Scherr +2 more
TL;DR: The inclusion of objective biomarkers will further elucidate the relationship between FI and a multitude of health outcomes to better inform strategies for reducing the pervasiveness of FI in the United States college student population.
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A Subsidized Healthy Food Prescription Program for Adults with type 2 Diabetes who are Experiencing Food Insecurity: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial, Modelling and Implementation Studies
Dana Lee Olstad,Reed F. Beall,Eldon Spackman,Sharlette Dunn,Lorraine L. Lipscombe,Kienan Williams,Richard T. Oster,Sara 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 E. Seidel,Jason Cabaj,David Campbell +29 more
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TL;DR: A type 2 hybrid effectiveness-implementation design is used to examine the reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation and maintenance (RE-AIM) of a subsidized healthy food prescription program for adults who are experiencing food insecurity and persistent hyperglycemia.
Local Food System Approaches to Address Food and Nutrition Security among Low-Income Populations: A Systematic Review
Katharine J. Garrity,Kathleen Krzyzanowski Guerra,Hannah C. Hart,K. Al-Muhanna,Emily C. Kunkler,Ashlea Braun,Kathryn I. Poppe,Kara Johnson,Emma Lazor,Yang Liu,Jennifer A. Garner +10 more
TL;DR: This systematic review of 34 studies (2000-2020) evaluates the impact of local food system approaches on food security, fruit and vegetable intake, and health outcomes among low-income populations, highlighting knowledge gaps and implementation best practices.
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