Childhood Adversity and Adult Reports of Food Insecurity
Posted by American Journal of Preventive Medicine on May 9, 2016
Childhood Adversity and Adult Reports of Food Insecurity Among Households With Children
Introduction: Exposure to childhood adversity, including abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction, is associated with negative long-term health and economic outcomes. Little is known about how adversity exposure in parents’ early lives may be related to later food insecurity for parents and their children. This study investigated the association between female caregivers’ adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and household and child food insecurity, taking into account depressive symptoms.
Methods: This study used cross-sectional data from 1,255 female caregivers of children aged o4
years surveyed in an urban clinical setting from March 2012 through June 2014. Measures included sociodemographic characteristics; caregivers’ ACEs, including abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction; depressive symptoms; and household and child food insecurity. Multinomial and logistic regression analyses assessed the relationship among ACEs, depressive symptoms, and household and child food security status.
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