Abstract
Objective
Examine how household food insecurity is related to adolescent weight status and disordered eating.
Design
Cross-sectional, population-based study. Adolescents self-reported unhealthy weight control behaviors, binge eating, meal frequency; weight status was measured. Household food insecurity was assessed by asking parents to respond to the validated six-item US Household Food Security Survey Module.
Setting
Adolescents surveyed within Minneapolis/St. Paul public middle and high schools completed surveys at school and their parents/guardians were surveyed by mail during the 2009–2010 academic year.
Participants
Ethnically/racially diverse, primarily low-income adolescents (mean age: 14.4 years, range: 10–22 years) and their parents/guardians (n=2,285 dyads).
Results
More than one third (38.9%) of adolescents experienced past-year household food insecurity, 43.2% reported disordered eating, and 39.6% were overweight. Generalized regression models showed that food insecure (FI) as compared to food secure (FS) adolescents had higher prevalence of overweight (FI: 42.3% versus FS: 37.9%, p=0.039), lower breakfast consumption (FI: 4.1 times/week versus FS: 4.4 times/week, p=0.005), and greater use of unhealthy weight control behaviors (FI: 49.0% versus FS: 39.5%, p<0.001) in unadjusted models. Models adjusted for parental education, ethnicity/race, sex, and age found that food insecurity was associated with higher prevalence of unhealthy weight control behaviors (FI: 44.5% versus FS: 37.8%, p=0.007), but not with weight status or other eating behaviors.
Conclusions
These results suggest that food insecurity may be an independent risk factor for unhealthy weight control behaviors, indicating a need to approach these intersecting issues in a comprehensive manner.
Keywords: Food insecurity, disordered eating, obesity, adolescents, eating behavior
Introduction
Food insecurity is defined as inconsistent or unpredictable access to affordable, nutritionally adequate food(1). Food insecurity has historically been associated with underweight status, but is now increasingly associated with obesity(2–4). This association with obesity may be explained by the fact that low-nutrient, low-fiber, energy-dense foods tend to be cheaper than nutrient-dense, fiber-rich, lower-energy foods(5, 6). Thus, food insecure individuals may disproportionately depend on these low cost, less nutritious foods, contributing to their risk for obesity. Another possible explanation for the food insecurity-obesity association is that food insecurity is linked with fluctuating food availability, which may increase the risk for cycles of caloric restriction followed by binge eating, a pattern which, if repeated over time, may increase the propensity for weight gain(7).
Several epidemiologic studies have investigated the relationship between food insecurity and weight status in adults and children. A 2017 meta-analysis included 123 cross-sectional and 7 longitudinal studies and found an overall positive association between food insecurity and elevated weight status in analyses unadjusted and adjusted for socioeconomic status(4). When looking at specific populations, this meta-analysis found that the food insecurity-obesity association was stronger in adult females than in children (defined as less than 16 years of age) or adult males.
Food insecurity is of particular concern for adolescents because they have high energy and nutrient needs to fuel their rapid growth and development. Reliable access to food that is familiar, of acceptable quality, and nutritionally adequate is foundational to healthful eating patterns for adolescents(8, 9). Consequently, any disruption to that foundation – including food insecurity – may put adolescents at increased risk for appetite dysregulation, inconsistent eating patterns, and disruption to predictable growth and development patterns, including accelerated weight velocity(8, 10). When investigating the food insecurity-weight status relationship in adolescents, findings have been mixed(11–15). A notable study by Lohman and colleagues examined the association of food insecurity with BMI gain over a 16-year period through prospective growth curve analysis(15). At baseline, participants were 15 years old, primarily non-Hispanic white, and residing in the rural Midwest. Investigators found that household food insecurity at 15 years of age predicted more rapid BMI gain from 16 to 31 years of age. However at baseline, there was no cross-sectional association between household food insecurity and BMI(15).
Food insecurity may also be linked to disordered eating. Cross-sectional studies in adults have found positive associations between food insecurity and disordered eating(16–21). One U.S. based study of adults found that food insecurity was more prevalent in the group with bulimia nervosa pathology in comparison to binge eating and control groups(21). Another study in adult patrons of food pantries in San Antonio, TX found that participants with the least food security reported higher levels of binge eating and overall eating disorder pathology compared to more food secure participants(20). Despite the high prevalence of disordered eating behaviors in adolescents(22–25), studies examining the relationship between food insecurity and disordered eating behaviors and attitudes in this population are limited(26, 27). We identified only three studies, a qualitative study(26) and a study which examined food insecurity as one potential risk factor for disordered eating(27), and one which examined food insecurity and body dissatisfaction(28). These studies found that food insecurity was associated with disordered eating or body dissatisfaction in adolescents. Our study builds on this data by specifically investigating whether household food insecurity, reported by parents/guardians, is associated with measured adolescent weight status and a comprehensive panel of problematic eating behaviors, reported by adolescents, in an ethnically diverse sample. Household food insecurity reported by parents/guardians was chosen as the exposure variable because of our goal to improve understanding of how the home food environment, not just the individual perceptions of adolescents regarding their food insecurity, may support or disrupt the foundation of healthful eating patterns for adolescents. We chose parent/guardian report because it is likely the more accurate measure of household-level food security status.
The current study expands upon the extant literature on food insecurity and weight status and disordered eating behaviors to explore these associations in a large population-based sample of adolescents. The study explores cross-sectional associations both with and without adjustment for socioeconomic status and ethnicity/race, given the interconnectedness of food insecurity with household income(29). We hypothesized that food insecurity would be associated with higher prevalence of overweight status, meal skipping, binge eating, and unhealthy weight control behaviors (i.e. fasting, eating very little food, using food substitutes, skipping meals, smoking more cigarettes, volitional vomiting, laxative, diet pill, or diuretic use) in unadjusted analyses. Lower socioeconomic status is associated with higher prevalence of food insecurity(30), less frequent breakfast intake(31, 32), higher prevalence of disordered eating(33), and higher BMI(32, 34, 35). Additionally, the existing literature suggests that persons who identify with an ethnicity/race other than non-Hispanic white experience higher prevalence of food insecurity(30), and tend to have less frequent breakfast intake(31), higher prevalence of disordered eating(36), and higher BMI(36). We were interested in understanding the independent effect of food insecurity on disordered eating and BMI, thus we examined models adjusted for ethnicity/race and our measure of socioeconomic status, parental education. We hypothesized that parental education and ethnicity/race would account for some of the association between food insecurity and weight status, meal skipping, and disordered eating, and therefore associations observed in unadjusted models would be attenuated in the adjusted models. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to examine associations between food insecurity, using a strong measure of household food insecurity, with both weight status and disordered eating in a population-based sample of urban adolescents.
Methods
Study Design and Sample
EAT 2010 (Eating and Activity in Teens) was designed to examine dietary intake, physical activity, weight control behaviors, weight status, and factors associated with these outcomes in adolescents(37–39). Project F-EAT (Families and Eating and Activity Among Teens) was designed to examine factors within the family and home environment of potential relevance to these weight-related behaviors(16, 40, 41). Data for this analysis are from these two coordinated, population-based studies.
For EAT 2010, surveys and anthropometric measures were completed by 2,793 adolescents during the 2009–2010 academic year. The study population included adolescents from 20 public middle and high schools in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area of Minnesota, which serve ethnically/racially diverse and largely low-income communities.
For Project F-EAT, data were collected by surveying up to two parents/guardians (n=3,709) of the adolescents in EAT 2010. For the purpose of simplicity throughout the remainder of this article, both parents and guardians will be referred to as “parents.” Approximately 70% of adolescents provided information for two parents and 30% provided contact information for one parent. In total, 2,382 adolescent participants in EAT 2010 (85.3%) had at least one parent respond and there were two parent respondents for 1,327 adolescents. Because our analyses depended on household variables obtained from the parents, adolescent participants whose parents did not participate in the study were excluded. Only data from the adolescent’s primary parent were used in the current analysis to ensure the most accurate information on the usual home environment. When two parents responded, primary parent status was determined using an algorithm that accounted for the family living situation (preference to parents who lived with their child more than half the time), relationship to the adolescent (preference to biological and adoptive parents over step-parents), and the parent’s sex (preference to female because of literature indicating that female parents are more likely to be responsible for household food purchasing and preparation)(39). Pairing adolescents with the primary parent resulted in a final analytic sample of 2,285 adolescent-parent dyads.
Adolescent Survey Development and Measures
The EAT 2010 survey is a 235-item self-report instrument which assesses a range of factors of potential relevance to weight status and weight-related behaviors among adolescents. Survey development was guided by a review of previous Project EAT surveys(42, 43) to identify the most salient items; a theoretical framework, which integrates an ecological perspective with Social Cognitive Theory(44, 45); expert review by professionals from different disciplines; and extensive pilot testing with adolescents(37, 39). The test-retest reliability of measures over a one-week period was also examined in a separate sample of 129 middle and high school students(22, 46).
Adolescent sociodemographic characteristics
Age, sex, and ethnicity/race were self-reported by adolescents. Ethnicity/race was assessed with the following question: “Do you think of yourself as…? (1) White, (2) Black or African American, (3) Hispanic or Latino, (4) Asian American, (5) Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, (6) American Indian or Native American, or (7) Other.” Only 35 adolescents reported “Hawaiian or Pacific Islander,” therefore they were coded as “Mixed or Other Race.”
Adolescent weight status
Trained research staff measured adolescents’ height and weight using standardized procedures during selected health, physical education, and science classes. Measurements were completed in a private area(47). Height was measured to the nearest 0.1 cm using a Shorr board and weight to the nearest 0.1 kg using a calibrated scale. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines were used to calculate BMI and BMI percentile for each adolescent(48, 49). Adolescents’ BMI was then dichotomized to represent weight status; a BMI ≥ 85th percentile was categorized as overweight and a BMI < 85th percentile was categorized as not overweight.
Adolescent meal frequency and disordered eating behaviors
Adolescents were asked to report how often they ate breakfast, lunch, and dinner. For example, they were asked, “During the past week, how many days did you eat breakfast?” Response options ranged from 0 to 7 days, and participants selected one response (test-retest r=0.76). The same questions and responses were repeated for lunch (test-retest r=0.47) and dinner (test-retest r=0.56).
Based on extensive pilot testing with adolescents and expert review to determine face validity(37, 42), unhealthy weight control behaviors were assessed with the following question, “Have you done any of the following things in order to lose weight or keep from gaining weight during the past year?” Responses included fasted, ate very little food, used a food substitute, skipped meals, smoked more cigarettes, took diet pills, made myself vomit, used laxatives, and used diuretics. In addition to reporting “yes/no” in response to each of the individual unhealthy weight control behaviors, a positive response for one or more behavior was coded as use of any unhealthy weight control behavior. Those unhealthy weight control behaviors further categorized as extreme included took diet pills, made myself vomit, used laxatives, and used diuretics. Study test-retest agreement was 85% for unhealthy weight control behaviors and 96% for the extreme weight control behavior subset(46).
Binge eating with and without loss of control was assessed using two questions adapted from the adult version of the Questionnaire on Eating and Weight Patterns-Revised(50). This questionnaire has good psychometric properties in adolescents(51). Binge eating was assessed by asking, “In the past year, have you ever eaten so much food in a short period of time that you would be embarrassed if others saw you (binge-eating)?” Loss of control was assessed next by asking, “During the times when you ate this way, did you feel you couldn’t stop eating or control what or how much you were eating?” Test-retest agreement for the binge question was 90%, and 75% for the loss of control question(46).
Parent Survey Development and Measures
The Project F-EAT survey was designed to assess food-specific parenting practices and the home food environment. A multi-disciplinary research team developed the Project F-EAT survey with guidance from an ecological framework(44, 52), a comprehensive review of the literature, and extensive pilot testing with parents of adolescents. Test-retest reliability was assessed in a subsample of 102 parent respondents who completed the parent survey twice within a 2-week period(16).
Parental education
Parent-reported household educational attainment was used to measure socioeconomic status (16, 34, 38, 53). Parents were asked, “What is the highest grade or year of school that you have completed?” The same question was asked about their spouse or partner. Responses included did not finish high school, finished high school or got GED, some college or training after high school, finished college, and advanced degree (e.g. Master’s degree, PhD, MD).
Household food insecurity
Past year food security was measured as a part of the parent survey using the previously validated six-item US Household Food Security Survey Module modified for self-administration which assesses food security over the past 12 months. This scale has been shown to correctly classify 97.7% of families when compared with the full 18-item scale included in the Current Population Survey(54, 55). The survey module includes the following items: “Is this statement true?: ‘We couldn’t afford to eat balanced meals’”; “In the past 12 months, did you or other adults in your household ever cut the size of your meals or skip meals because there wasn’t enough money for food?”; “In the past 12 months, did you ever eat less than you felt you should because there wasn’t enough money for food?”; and “In the past 12 months, were you ever hungry but didn’t eat because there was not enough money for food?” Affirmative responses to the items were summed according to established guidelines and this raw score (test-retest r=0.77) was used to categorize households as food secure (score=0–1) or food insecure (score≥2)(16, 55). We used the less severe cut-point of low food security (score≥2) because we were most interested in understanding, from a population perspective, how more prevalent exposures to food insecurity were linked to more common public health problems (i.e., disordered eating behaviors). Additionally, in a supplemental sensitivity analysis, we used the more severe cut-point of very low food security (score≥5)(16, 56).
Statistical Analysis
Bivariate associations between household food insecurity status and key variables including sociodemographic characteristics were assessed using t-tests or chi-square tests, as appropriate. We were interested in understanding the specific effect of food insecurity on disordered eating and weight status above and beyond the effect of socioeconomic status. Therefore, crude and adjusted (parental education, race/ethnicity, sex, and age) logistic regression models with robust standard errors were used to estimate marginal probabilities and 95% confidence intervals for each binary outcome (e.g., overweight status). Similarly, crude and adjusted (parental education, race/ethnicity, sex, and age) linear regression models with robust standard errors were used to estimate marginal means and 95% confidence intervals for each ordinal outcome (e.g., frequency of breakfast). Adjusted models used Huber-White robust sandwich estimators to adjust for potential clustering by school. Linear regression models are appropriate for ordinal and other non-normally distributed outcomes in large sample sizes(57). All analyses were conducted using SAS 9.4 (Cary, NC, copyright 2002–2012).
Results
Descriptive findings of food insecurity by sociodemographic characteristics
Participating adolescents were ethnically/racially diverse and were primarily living in low socioeconomic status homes (Table 1). The mean age of adolescent participants was 14.4 years (age range 10–22 years); 45.8% identified as male and 54.2% identified as female. Parent participants had a mean age of 42.3 years (SD=8.6). The majority of parent respondents were mothers or other female guardians (62.0%). Household food insecurity was experienced in the past year by 38.9% of this ethnically/racially diverse, largely low-income, urban adolescent sample. Non-white adolescent race, lower household educational attainment, and lower household income were associated with greater household food insecurity (p<0.001). The data did not suggest differences in household food security status based on age or sex (Table 1).
Table 1.
Characteristics | Total (n=2285) | Food Secure (n=1395) | Food Insecure (n=890) | p-value | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mean or % | SD or n | Mean or % | SD or n | Mean or % | SD or n | ||
Total | n/a | n/a | 61.1 | 1395 | 38.9 | 890 | n/a |
Age (years), mean and SD | 14.5 | 2.0 | 14.5 | 2.0 | 14.4 | 1.9 | 0.052 |
Sex, % and n | |||||||
Male | 45.8 | 1047 | 45.8 | 639 | 45.8 | 408 | 0.987 |
Female | 54.2 | 1238 | 54.2 | 756 | 54.2 | 482 | |
Race / Ethnicity, % and n | |||||||
White | 21.0 | 477 | 25.8 | 358 | 13.4 | 119 | <0.001 |
Black or African American | 28.0 | 637 | 28.1 | 390 | 27.9 | 247 | |
Hispanic or Latino | 17.2 | 391 | 18.3 | 254 | 15.5 | 137 | |
Asian American | 19.5 | 443 | 15.3 | 212 | 26.0 | 231 | |
Native American | 3.2 | 72 | 3.0 | 42 | 3.4 | 30 | |
Mixed or Other Race | 11.3 | 257 | 9.6 | 134 | 13.9 | 123 | |
Parental Education, % and n | |||||||
Did not finish high school | 23.5 | 533 | 19.5 | 270 | 29.9 | 263 | <0.001 |
Finished high school | 20.5 | 466 | 19.8 | 275 | 21.7 | 191 | |
Some college | 28.9 | 656 | 26.4 | 366 | 32.9 | 290 | |
Finished college | 18.1 | 410 | 21.5 | 298 | 12.7 | 112 | |
Advanced degree | 9.0 | 204 | 12.9 | 179 | 2.8 | 25 |
Chi square Test: % and n
T-Test: Mean and SD
Parental Education was reported by parents and refers to the highest educational attainment of any parent or guardian in the household. All other sociodemographic characteristics were self-reported by adolescents.
Eating behaviors and weight status by food insecurity status in adolescents
In the unadjusted model, household food insecurity was associated with higher prevalence of overweight status (food insecure: 42.3% versus food secure: 37.9%, p=0.039). Adjusting for ethnicity/race, parental education, sex, and age attenuated this difference and it was no longer statistically significant (Tables 2 and 3).
Table 2.
Characteristics | Food Secure (n=1395) | Food Insecure (n=890) | p-value | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mean or % | SD or n | Mean or % | SD or n | ||
Breakfast (eaten per week), mean and SD | 4.4 | 2.6 | 4.1 | 2.6 | 0.005 |
Lunch (eaten per week), mean and SD | 5.9 | 1.9 | 5.8 | 1.9 | 0.183 |
Dinner (eaten per week), mean and SD | 6.1 | 1.7 | 6.0 | 1.7 | 0.375 |
UWCB (any), % and n | 39.5 | 549 | 49.0 | 434 | <0.001 |
Extreme UWCB, % and n | 4.5 | 63 | 6.2 | 55 | 0.077 |
Binge eating, % and n | 14.7 | 204 | 13.8 | 121 | 0.556 |
Binge with loss of control, % and n | 8.1 | 112 | 7.7 | 67 | 0.715 |
Unhealthy Weight Control Behaviors: | |||||
Fasted, % and n | 11.0 | 152 | 15.7 | 138 | 0.001 |
Ate very little food, % and n | 30.2 | 420 | 35.7 | 317 | 0.006 |
Volitional vomiting, % and n | 2.7 | 37 | 2.2 | 19 | 0.441 |
Skipped meals, % and n | 26.3 | 365 | 32.6 | 288 | 0.001 |
Diet pill use, % and n | 2.1 | 29 | 2.4 | 21 | 0.652 |
Laxative use, % and n | 0.7 | 10 | 1.8 | 16 | 0.018 |
Diuretic use, % and n | 0.5 | 7 | 1.9 | 17 | 0.001 |
Food substitute use, % and n | 6.7 | 93 | 8.1 | 71 | 0.231 |
Smoked more cigarettes, % and n | 2.1 | 29 | 2.2 | 19 | 0.907 |
Overweight, % and n | 37.9 | 529 | 42.3 | 376 | 0.039 |
UWCB, Unhealthy Weight Control Behavior
Chi square Test: % and n
T-Test: Mean and SD
Table 3.
Characteristics | Food Secure (n=1395) | Food Insecure (n=890) | p-value | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Predicted Mean or % | 95% CI | Predicted Mean or % | 95% CI | ||
Breakfast (eaten per week), mean and 95% CI | 4.3 | 4.2, 4.5 | 4.1 | 3.9, 4.4 | 0.227 |
Lunch (eaten per week), mean and 95% CI | 5.9 | 5.8, 6.0 | 5.8 | 5.6, 6.0 | 0.361 |
Dinner (eaten per week), mean and 95% CI | 6.0 | 5.9, 6.2 | 6.1 | 5.9, 6.3 | 0.601 |
UWCB (any), % and 95% CI | 37.8 | 35.4, 40.2 | 44.5 | 39.9, 49.1 | 0.007 |
Extreme UWCB, % and 95% CI | 3.2 | 2.3, 4.5 | 4.1 | 3.0, 5.6 | 0.094 |
Binge eating, % and 95% CI | 14.0 | 12.5, 15.6 | 12.9 | 11.4, 14.5 | 0.143 |
Binge with loss of control, % and 95% CI | 7.5 | 6.4, 8.7 | 6.9 | 5.2, 9.1 | 0.645 |
Unhealthy Weight Control Behaviors: | |||||
Fasted, % and 95% CI | 10.0 | 8.4, 11.8 | 13.4 | 10.6, 16.9 | 0.047 |
Ate very little food, % and 95% CI | 29.1 | 27.0, 31.3 | 32.0 | 27.7, 36.6 | 0.184 |
Volitional vomiting, % and 95% CI | 1.9 | 1.3, 3.0 | 1.5 | 0.7, 3.2 | 0.472 |
Skipped meals, % and 95% CI | 24.5 | 22.0, 27.1 | 28.6 | 25.3, 32.1 | 0.075 |
Diet pill use, % and 95% CI | 1.2 | 0.8, 1.8 | 1.4 | 0.9, 2.1 | 0.592 |
Laxative use, % and 95% CI | 0.3 | 0.1, 0.9 | 0.8 | 0.3, 2.0 | 0.005 |
Diuretic use, % and 95% CI | * | * | * | * | * |
Food substitute use, % and 95% CI | 6.3 | 5.3, 7.5 | 6.8 | 5.4, 8.5 | 0.599 |
Smoked more cigarettes, % and 95% CI | 1.7 | 1.0, 2.8 | 2.0 | 1.4, 2.9 | 0.553 |
Overweight, % and 95% CI | 35.6 | 32.7, 38.5 | 37.6 | 33.4, 42.1 | 0.391 |
CI, Confidence Interval
UWCB, Unhealthy Weight Control Behavior
Prevalence is too low to estimate result.
Logistic regression models with robust standard errors were used to estimate marginal probabilities and 95% CI for each binary outcome variable adjusted for parental education, race/ethnicity, age, sex, and potential clustering by school. Similarly adjusted multiple regression models with robust standard errors were used to estimate means and 95% CI for mean number of breakfast, lunch, and dinner outcomes.
Household food insecurity was associated in unadjusted models with less frequent adolescent breakfast consumption (food insecure: 4.1 times/week versus food secure: 4.4 times per week, p=0.005), greater likelihood of engaging in any unhealthy weight control behavior (food insecure: 49.0% versus food secure: 39.5%, p<0.001), and the following specific unhealthy weight control behaviors: fasting, eating very little food, meal skipping, laxative use, and diuretic use to control weight. There was no association between food insecurity and volitional vomiting, diet pill use, food substitute use, or smoking more cigarettes nor was there an association with binge eating (Table 2).
After adjusting for race/ethnicity, parental education, sex, and age, associations remained statistically significant for food insecurity with any unhealthy weight control behavior (food insecure: 44.5% versus food secure: 37.8%, p=0.007), including the following specific unhealthy weight control behaviors: fasting (food insecure: 13.4% versus food secure: 10.0%, p=0.047) and laxative use (food insecure: 0.8% versus food secure: 0.3%, p=0.005) (Table 3). Observed relationships were similar when we used the more severe cut-point value of very low food security from the six-item US Household Food Security Survey Module (data not shown).
Discussion
In this population-based sample of ethnically diverse, largely low-income, urban adolescents, we found that household food insecurity was associated with higher prevalence of overweight and several unhealthy eating behaviors in unadjusted models. After adjustment for ethnicity/race, parental education, sex, and age, associations remained between food insecurity and unhealthy weight control behaviors such as fasting and laxative use. Household food insecurity, overweight, and disordered eating behaviors were all common in this adolescent sample, with 43% reporting unhealthy weight control behaviors, 40% experiencing overweight, and 39% living in food insecure homes. These findings highlight the complex nature of prevalent nutrition-related problems experienced by adolescents.
Studies examining the food insecurity-eating behavior relationship have generally not focused on the adolescent age group. To our knowledge, only three studies have investigated associations between food insecurity and disordered eating behaviors and attitudes in adolescents(26–28). The first was a qualitative study by Tester and colleagues in low-income children and adolescents enrolled in an outpatient weight management program (mean age: 11 years old)(26). Using the US Core Food Security Model to characterize food insecurity and DSM-5 criteria for binge eating disorder and other specified feeding and eating disorders to characterize disordered eating, participants’ disordered eating emerged as a theme in the Food Insecure group but not the Food Secure group(26). The second study by West and colleagues was a longitudinal population-based study in adolescents that explored various risk factors for disordered eating, one of which was food insecurity. This study found that self-reported food insecurity during adolescence independently predicted binge eating five years later, but only in adolescents from low socioeconomic status backgrounds(27). Our results are consistent with both of these studies in that we found positive associations between household food insecurity and disordered eating behaviors in adolescents. A third study by Altman and colleagues found that food insecurity was cross-sectionally associated with higher odds of body dissatisfaction in children and adolescents (n=14,768, mean age=10.2 years)(28). Their results were consistent across all racial/ethnic groups and BMI categories even after adjusting for age, sex, and free/reduced price meal eligibility, BMI, and race/ethnicity(28). More studies are needed to further understand the relationships between food insecurity and eating behaviors, body satisfaction, and weight status in young people.
When investigating the food insecurity-eating behavior relationship in adolescents, it is important to consider the complex nature of the food environments that food insecure adolescents occupy. For example, food insecure adolescents may be attempting to control their weight while also navigating various food environments at home, school, with peers, at work, and/or extracurricular activities. Furthermore, adolescents may engage in disordered eating to control weight but also for other reasons. For example, a 2016 report found that in food insecure households, parents generally try to protect both children and adolescents from experiencing hunger. Adolescents also routinely take on this role by restricting their food intake to ensure younger siblings have enough to eat(58). Therefore, future research on this topic should investigate competing motivations for adolescent disordered eating behaviors. It may also be useful to explore whether birth order and/or the specific age during which food insecurity is most acute plays a role in eating behavior within the context of a food insecure household.
Household food insecurity, overweight, and disordered eating behaviors were each highly prevalent in our sample of adolescents from diverse ethnic/racial and socioeconomic backgrounds. These findings are concerning, given the well-established individual health risks associated with obesity(59, 60), food insecurity(61–64), and disordered eating(65–69). Previous results reported by our team and others reveal that both binge eating(33, 49, 70) and restrictive eating(33, 36, 71) are positively associated with overweight. Despite these findings, food insecurity, disordered eating, and overweight are most often investigated and addressed as separate and unrelated(33, 72–77). In recent years, some attention has been paid to the overlap between overweight and disordered eating in adolescents, but the role of food insecurity is generally not included in such discussions(33, 72–77). Healthcare providers who work with adolescents should be aware that disordered eating, food insecurity, and overweight are prevalent problems that can co-occur and may perhaps exacerbate one another. Given the high prevalence of food insecurity, disordered eating, and overweight, and their potential to negatively impact health outcomes for adolescents, understanding how to best address all three of these problems in a comprehensive manner should be the focus of future research.
Our study has several strengths. To our knowledge, it is the first quantitative study to investigate the relationship between household food insecurity and a range of weight-related outcomes in adolescents: meal frequency, disordered eating, and weight status. Our population-based sample was large and ethnically diverse. Adolescents’ height and weight were measured by trained research staff using standardized procedures. We were able to survey adolescents about their own eating behaviors, survey parents about household food security status, and then link parent data to adolescent data. We investigated a wide variety of eating behavior and sociodemographic variables in the adolescents. Finally, the survey’s extensive pilot testing and test-retest reliability testing ensured that questions were developmentally appropriate for adolescents. Despite our study’s strengths, it also has important limitations. Because the causes of disordered eating and food insecurity are multifactorial, there may have been confounding or causal variables we did not include in our statistical models. Our study relied on several self-reported measures, so recall bias may have affected our results. Due to our cross-sectional design, we were unable to draw conclusions about a temporal or causal relationship between household food insecurity and adolescent eating behaviors or weight status. It is possible that parent-reported food security may not accurately reflect the food security experienced by the adolescent. Carlos Chavez and colleagues found discordance in reports of food insecurity in 51% of 70 Latino adolescent-parent dyads(78). However, it is worth considering that developmental factors may play a role in such discordance. Furthermore, our specific research question focused on the home food environment, rather than adolescent perceptions of food security, thus we determined parental report of food security was the most appropriate exposure for our study. Finally, these data were collected in 2010, shortly after the Great Recession of 2008, and the median household income range in this sample ($20,000–34,999) was much lower than that of households with families in 2010 in Minneapolis and St. Paul of $61,725 and $55,254 respectively(79). These factors may explain the high prevalence of food insecurity in our sample and may impact the generalizability of our results. However, the high prevalence of food insecurity in this sample provided a unique opportunity to improve understanding of the role of food insecurity in adolescent nutrition-related health outcomes.
Our study builds on a small amount of published literature showing a positive association between household food insecurity and adolescent disordered eating(26–28). Our findings point to the need for well-designed longitudinal studies to investigate the etiologic nature of these relationships. Furthermore, these results draw attention to health disparities that may exist for youth who are overweight and/or food insecure. Clinicians and public health practitioners should be aware that all adolescents, including those who are overweight or food insecure, are at high risk for disordered eating behaviors and the accompanying negative health consequences. Given the high prevalence and poor health outcomes associated with food insecurity, overweight, and disordered eating in adolescents, future research should focus on elucidating these relationships and understanding how to intervene with individuals who are at the highest risk. This study highlights the varied and intersecting barriers adolescents face to achieving nutritionally adequate, balanced, and healthful eating patterns. More research is needed to confirm these findings and further understand these multifaceted problems.
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