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Food Insecurity among Low-Income Households with Children Participating in a School-Based Fruit and Vegetable Co-Op

Allison Marshall, Ru‐Jye Chuang, Joanne Chow, Nalini Ranjit, Jayna M. Dave, Mallika Mathur, Christine Markham, Shreela V. Sharma

2022Children19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of a nutrition intervention on food insecurity among low-income households with children. Data were collected from 371 parent−child dyads in a quasi-experimental evaluation study of a 1-year intervention (n = 6 intervention schools receiving Brighter Bites, n = 6 wait-list control schools), and longitudinal follow-up of the intervention group 2 years post-intervention in Houston, Texas. Data were collected at three timepoints: at baseline and 1 year for all participants, and at 2 year follow-up for the intervention group (the wait-list control group received the intervention during that time). At baseline, most parents reported food insecurity (60.6%; 70% intervention group, 53.6% control). Food insecurity decreased significantly from 81.3% to 61.7% [(−0.32, −0.07) p = 0.002] among intervention participants immediately post-intervention. After adjusting for ethnicity, 2 years post-intervention the predicted percentage of participants reporting food insecurity decreased significantly by roughly 35.4% from 76.4% at baseline to 41.0% [(−0.49, −0.22), p < 0.001]. Between-group changes were not significant. The re-sults of this study demonstrated a significant positive impact of Brighter Bites on food security in the short and long-term among low-income households with children, albeit results should be in-terpreted with caution.

Topics & Concepts

Food insecurityIntervention (counseling)Low incomeFood securityMedicineEthnic groupEnvironmental healthDemographyGeographySocioeconomicsAgriculturePsychiatrySociologyArchaeologyAnthropologyFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsHomelessness and Social IssuesChild Nutrition and Water Access