4.7 Article

Diet Quality and Contextual Factors Influencing Food Choice among Adolescents with Food Security and Food Insecurity in Baltimore City

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14214573

Keywords

food insecurity; nutrition insecurity; adolescents; dietary intake; dietary behaviors

Funding

  1. Bloomberg American Health Initiative-American Vanguard Award
  2. Johns Hopkins Urban Health Institute--Strategic Consultation Grant for Baltimore City
  3. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

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This study found no significant differences in overall diet quality or components between adolescents with food security and those with food insecurity, except for seafood and plant proteins. Adolescents' dietary choices are influenced by their parents, home food environment, and workplace environments. Programs and policies aimed at improving healthy food access may positively impact adolescent food security and diet quality.
This study evaluated differences in overall diet quality, diet quality components, and food-related contextual factors between adolescents with food security and those with food insecurity. Mixed methods analysis was conducted on data from three 24-h dietary recalls from 61 adolescents ages 14-19 years old living in Baltimore, Maryland, USA in 2020-2021. All adolescents were sampled from households eligible for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in 2020. There were no significant differences in overall diet quality or components between adolescents with food security and those with food insecurity in this sample, except for seafood and plant proteins, which was higher for adolescents with food insecurity. Qualitative analysis found that adolescents were largely influenced by their parents and the home food environment, and that workplace environments enabled adolescents to eat foods high in refined grains, sugar, and saturated fat. These findings provide insight about the experiences of low-income adolescents during times when they are home for prolonged periods (i.e., emergency school closures, summer, and winter breaks). Programs and policies that aim to improve healthy food access may positively impact adolescent food security and diet quality, and it is important to ensure that healthy foods are available and accessible to adolescents in the places where they spend the most time. Multilevel interventions in the home, school, and workplace may be most effective in encouraging healthy eating behaviors among adolescents.

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