Longitudinal patterns of food insecurity, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices during COVID‐19

Abstract Background The economic impacts of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) have drastically increased food insecurity in the United States. Initial data, collected a few months into the pandemic, showed that families, particularly those experiencing food insecurity, reported detrimental cha...

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Main Authors: Elizabeth L. Adams, Laura J. Caccavale, Danyel Smith, Melanie K. Bean
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-08-01
Series:Obesity Science & Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.499
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spelling doaj-93e5197484b94894b90b2e4335f7fd8b2021-08-07T03:03:16ZengWileyObesity Science & Practice2055-22382021-08-017441542410.1002/osp4.499Longitudinal patterns of food insecurity, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices during COVID‐19Elizabeth L. Adams0Laura J. Caccavale1Danyel Smith2Melanie K. Bean3Department of Pediatrics Children's Hospital of Richmond at Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond Virginia USADepartment of Pediatrics Children's Hospital of Richmond at Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond Virginia USADepartment of Pediatrics Children's Hospital of Richmond at Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond Virginia USADepartment of Pediatrics Children's Hospital of Richmond at Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond Virginia USAAbstract Background The economic impacts of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) have drastically increased food insecurity in the United States. Initial data, collected a few months into the pandemic, showed that families, particularly those experiencing food insecurity, reported detrimental changes to their home food environment and parent feeding practices, compared to before COVID‐19. Objective This follow‐up study obtained longitudinal data from a sample of parents in the United States to quantify changes in food security status, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices, from before to across COVID‐19 as the pandemic continued to persist. Methods Parents (N = 433) completed online surveys May (T1) and September (T2) 2020 during COVID‐19. Food security, home food environment, and parent feeding practices were reported at each timepoint. At T1, parents also retrospectively reported on these factors pertaining to before COVID‐19. Chi square analyses and repeated measure mixed models examined associations among study variables. Results Low or very low food security increased from before COVID‐19 (37%) to T1 (54%) and decreased by T2 (45%). About 30% of families who became food insecure, and 44% who stayed food insecure from T1 to T2, reported a decrease in total food in their home; only 3%–6% who became/stayed food secure reported this decrease. Parents' concern for child overweight and use of monitoring increased from before COVID‐19 to T1, and decreased by T2, but remained elevated above pre–COVID‐19 values. Conclusion Rates of food insecurity remain high as this pandemic persists. Continued assessment of nutrition‐related factors and increased economic supports are critical for families to endure COVID‐19 and prevent long‐term obesity and health risks.https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.499child weightcoronavirusfood insecuritynutritionpandemicparent feeding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth L. Adams
Laura J. Caccavale
Danyel Smith
Melanie K. Bean
spellingShingle Elizabeth L. Adams
Laura J. Caccavale
Danyel Smith
Melanie K. Bean
Longitudinal patterns of food insecurity, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices during COVID‐19
Obesity Science & Practice
child weight
coronavirus
food insecurity
nutrition
pandemic
parent feeding
author_facet Elizabeth L. Adams
Laura J. Caccavale
Danyel Smith
Melanie K. Bean
author_sort Elizabeth L. Adams
title Longitudinal patterns of food insecurity, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices during COVID‐19
title_short Longitudinal patterns of food insecurity, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices during COVID‐19
title_full Longitudinal patterns of food insecurity, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices during COVID‐19
title_fullStr Longitudinal patterns of food insecurity, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices during COVID‐19
title_full_unstemmed Longitudinal patterns of food insecurity, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices during COVID‐19
title_sort longitudinal patterns of food insecurity, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices during covid‐19
publisher Wiley
series Obesity Science & Practice
issn 2055-2238
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Background The economic impacts of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) have drastically increased food insecurity in the United States. Initial data, collected a few months into the pandemic, showed that families, particularly those experiencing food insecurity, reported detrimental changes to their home food environment and parent feeding practices, compared to before COVID‐19. Objective This follow‐up study obtained longitudinal data from a sample of parents in the United States to quantify changes in food security status, the home food environment, and parent feeding practices, from before to across COVID‐19 as the pandemic continued to persist. Methods Parents (N = 433) completed online surveys May (T1) and September (T2) 2020 during COVID‐19. Food security, home food environment, and parent feeding practices were reported at each timepoint. At T1, parents also retrospectively reported on these factors pertaining to before COVID‐19. Chi square analyses and repeated measure mixed models examined associations among study variables. Results Low or very low food security increased from before COVID‐19 (37%) to T1 (54%) and decreased by T2 (45%). About 30% of families who became food insecure, and 44% who stayed food insecure from T1 to T2, reported a decrease in total food in their home; only 3%–6% who became/stayed food secure reported this decrease. Parents' concern for child overweight and use of monitoring increased from before COVID‐19 to T1, and decreased by T2, but remained elevated above pre–COVID‐19 values. Conclusion Rates of food insecurity remain high as this pandemic persists. Continued assessment of nutrition‐related factors and increased economic supports are critical for families to endure COVID‐19 and prevent long‐term obesity and health risks.
topic child weight
coronavirus
food insecurity
nutrition
pandemic
parent feeding
url https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.499
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