Litcius/Paper detail

Food Insecurity, the Home Food Environment, and Parent Feeding Practices in the Era of COVID‐19

Elizabeth L. Adams, Laura J. Caccavale, Danyel Smith, Melanie K. Bean

2020Obesity289 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to describe changes in families' home food environment and parent feeding practices, from before to during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, and examine whether changes differed by food security status. METHODS: and univariate regressions examined associations by food security status. RESULTS: The percent of families reporting very low food security increased by 20% from before to during COVID-19 (P < 0.01). About one-third of families increased the amount of high-calorie snack foods, desserts/sweets, and fresh foods in their home; 47% increased nonperishable processed foods. Concern about child overweight increased during COVID-19, with a greater increase for food-insecure versus food-secure parents (P < 0.01). Use of restriction, pressure to eat, and monitoring increased, with a greater increase in pressure to eat for parents with food insecurity compared with food-secure parents (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: During COVID-19, increases in very low food security and changes in the home food environment and parent feeding practices were observed. Results highlight the need to address negative impacts of COVID-19 on children's obesity risk, particularly among those facing health disparities.

Topics & Concepts

Food insecurityFood securityEnvironmental healthCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)OverweightObesityMedicinePandemicCalorieDiseaseGeographyInfectious disease (medical specialty)AgricultureArchaeologyPathologyEndocrinologyInternal medicineFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsCOVID-19 and Mental HealthCOVID-19 Pandemic Impacts