4.3 Article

Food insecurity and diabetes self-management among food pantry clients

期刊

PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION
卷 20, 期 1, 页码 183-189

出版社

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1368980016001786

关键词

Food security; Food pantries; Diabetes self-management

资金

  1. NIH/NCRR/OD UCSF-CTSI [KL2 RR024130]
  2. AHRQ Career Development Award [R00HS022408]
  3. The Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation
  4. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [T32GM066691]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Objective: To examine the association between level of food security and diabetes self-management among food pantry clients, which is largely not possible using clinic-based sampling methods. Design: Cross-sectional descriptive study. Setting: Community-based food pantries in California, Ohio and Texas, USA, from March 2012 through March 2014. Subjects: Convenience sample of adults with diabetes queuing at pantries (n 1237; 83 % response). Sampled adults were stratified as food secure, low food secure or very low food secure. We used point-of-care glycated Hb (HbA(1c)) testing to determine glycaemic control and captured diabetes self-management using validated survey items. Results: The sample was 70 % female, 55 % Latino/Hispanic, 25 % white and 10 % black/African American, with a mean age of 56 years. Eighty-four per cent were food insecure, one-half of whom had very low food security. Mean HbA(1c) was 8.1 % and did not vary significantly by food security status. In adjusted models, very-low-food-secure participants, compared with both low-food-secure and food-secure participants, had poorer diabetes self-efficacy, greater diabetes distress, greater medication non-adherence, higher prevalence of severe hypoglycaemic episodes, higher prevalence of depressive symptoms, more medication affordability challenges, and more food and medicine or health supply trade-offs. Conclusions: Few studies of the health impact of food security have been able to examine very low food security. In a food pantry sample with high rates of food insecurity, we found that diabetes self-management becomes increasingly difficult as food security worsens. The efficacy of interventions to improve diabetes self-management may increase if food security is simultaneously addressed.

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