Litcius/Paper detail

Increasing food insecurity severity is associated with lower diet quality

Katherine Kent, Tracy Schumacher, Sebastian Kočar, Ami Seivwright, Denis Visentin, Clare E. Collins, Libby Lester

2024Public Health Nutrition18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Objective: Food insecurity may reduce diet quality, but the relationship between food insecurity severity and diet quality is under-researched. This study aimed to examine the relationship between diet quality and severity of household food insecurity. Design: A cross-sectional, online survey used the United States Department of Agriculture Household Food Security Six-item Short Form to classify respondents as food secure or marginally, moderately or severely food insecure. The Australian Recommended Food Score (ARFS; scored 0–73) determined diet quality (ARFS total and sub-scale scores). Survey-weighted linear regression (adjusted for age, sex, income, education, location and household composition) was conducted. Setting: Tasmania, Australia. Participants: Community-dwelling adults (aged 18 years and over). Results: The mean ARFS total for the sample ( n 804, 53 % female, 29 % aged > 65 years) was 32·4 ( s d = 9·8). As the severity of household food insecurity increased, ARFS total decreased. Marginally food-insecure respondents reported a mean ARFS score three points lower than food-secure adults (B = –2·7; 95 % CI (–5·11, –0·34); P = 0·03) and reduced by six points for moderately (B = –5·6; 95 % CI (–7·26, –3·90); P < 0·001) and twelve points for severely food-insecure respondents (B = –11·5; 95 % CI (–13·21, –9·78); P < 0·001). Marginally food-insecure respondents had significantly lower vegetable sub-scale scores, moderately food-insecure respondents had significantly lower sub-scale scores for all food groups except dairy and severely food-insecure respondents had significantly lower scores for all sub-scale scores. Conclusions: Poorer diet quality is evident in marginally, moderately and severely food-insecure adults. Interventions to reduce food insecurity and increase diet quality are required to prevent poorer nutrition-related health outcomes in food-insecure populations in Australia.

Topics & Concepts

Food insecurityFood securityMedicineEnvironmental healthScale (ratio)DemographyCross-sectional studyAgricultureGeographyCartographyArchaeologyPathologySociologyFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsObesity, Physical Activity, DietChild Nutrition and Water Access
Increasing food insecurity severity is associated with lower diet quality | Litcius