Relationship of household food insecurity to health-related quality of life in a large sample of rural and urban women

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Relationship of household food insecurity to health-related quality of life in a large sample of rural and urban women. / Sharkey, Joseph R.; Johnson, Cassandra M.; Dean, Wesley R.

I: Women and Health, Bind 51, Nr. 5, 2011, s. 442-460.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Sharkey, JR, Johnson, CM & Dean, WR 2011, 'Relationship of household food insecurity to health-related quality of life in a large sample of rural and urban women', Women and Health, bind 51, nr. 5, s. 442-460. https://doi.org/10.1080/03630242.2011.584367

APA

Sharkey, J. R., Johnson, C. M., & Dean, W. R. (2011). Relationship of household food insecurity to health-related quality of life in a large sample of rural and urban women. Women and Health, 51(5), 442-460. https://doi.org/10.1080/03630242.2011.584367

Vancouver

Sharkey JR, Johnson CM, Dean WR. Relationship of household food insecurity to health-related quality of life in a large sample of rural and urban women. Women and Health. 2011;51(5):442-460. https://doi.org/10.1080/03630242.2011.584367

Author

Sharkey, Joseph R. ; Johnson, Cassandra M. ; Dean, Wesley R. / Relationship of household food insecurity to health-related quality of life in a large sample of rural and urban women. I: Women and Health. 2011 ; Bind 51, Nr. 5. s. 442-460.

Bibtex

@article{8ee92bffcb9b423e973bf7645176bf9a,
title = "Relationship of household food insecurity to health-related quality of life in a large sample of rural and urban women",
abstract = "The authors examined the associations of household food insecurity and other characteristics with fair-to-poor general health, poor physical health, and frequent mental distress among 1,367 rural and urban women in Texas. The 2006 Brazos Valley Community Health Assessment provided data on demographic characteristics, economic risk factors, health-related quality of life, household food insecurity, and geographic residence. Multivariable logistic regression models were estimated for the three health-related quality of life measures: fair-to-poor health, poor physical health, and frequent mental distress, adjusting for confounding variables. Having less than 12 years of education, not being employed full-time, and being household food insecure were independently significantly associated with increased odds for all health-related quality of life outcomes. Rural residence and being nonwhite were associated with fair-to-poor general health, but not physical or mental health. Results from the separate urban and rural models indicated that household food insecurity was associated with fair-to-poor general health among rural women, not among urban women. Poverty and being nonwhite were also associated with increased odds of reporting fair-to-poor general health, but were significant only among urban women. These results emphasize the need for health promotion and policy efforts to consider household food access and availability as part of promoting healthful food choices and good physical and mental health among women, especially rural women.",
keywords = "African American, Food security, Mental health, Nutrition, Quality of life, Rural, Socioeconomic status",
author = "Sharkey, {Joseph R.} and Johnson, {Cassandra M.} and Dean, {Wesley R.}",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1080/03630242.2011.584367",
language = "English",
volume = "51",
pages = "442--460",
journal = "Women & Health",
issn = "0363-0242",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Relationship of household food insecurity to health-related quality of life in a large sample of rural and urban women

AU - Sharkey, Joseph R.

AU - Johnson, Cassandra M.

AU - Dean, Wesley R.

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - The authors examined the associations of household food insecurity and other characteristics with fair-to-poor general health, poor physical health, and frequent mental distress among 1,367 rural and urban women in Texas. The 2006 Brazos Valley Community Health Assessment provided data on demographic characteristics, economic risk factors, health-related quality of life, household food insecurity, and geographic residence. Multivariable logistic regression models were estimated for the three health-related quality of life measures: fair-to-poor health, poor physical health, and frequent mental distress, adjusting for confounding variables. Having less than 12 years of education, not being employed full-time, and being household food insecure were independently significantly associated with increased odds for all health-related quality of life outcomes. Rural residence and being nonwhite were associated with fair-to-poor general health, but not physical or mental health. Results from the separate urban and rural models indicated that household food insecurity was associated with fair-to-poor general health among rural women, not among urban women. Poverty and being nonwhite were also associated with increased odds of reporting fair-to-poor general health, but were significant only among urban women. These results emphasize the need for health promotion and policy efforts to consider household food access and availability as part of promoting healthful food choices and good physical and mental health among women, especially rural women.

AB - The authors examined the associations of household food insecurity and other characteristics with fair-to-poor general health, poor physical health, and frequent mental distress among 1,367 rural and urban women in Texas. The 2006 Brazos Valley Community Health Assessment provided data on demographic characteristics, economic risk factors, health-related quality of life, household food insecurity, and geographic residence. Multivariable logistic regression models were estimated for the three health-related quality of life measures: fair-to-poor health, poor physical health, and frequent mental distress, adjusting for confounding variables. Having less than 12 years of education, not being employed full-time, and being household food insecure were independently significantly associated with increased odds for all health-related quality of life outcomes. Rural residence and being nonwhite were associated with fair-to-poor general health, but not physical or mental health. Results from the separate urban and rural models indicated that household food insecurity was associated with fair-to-poor general health among rural women, not among urban women. Poverty and being nonwhite were also associated with increased odds of reporting fair-to-poor general health, but were significant only among urban women. These results emphasize the need for health promotion and policy efforts to consider household food access and availability as part of promoting healthful food choices and good physical and mental health among women, especially rural women.

KW - African American

KW - Food security

KW - Mental health

KW - Nutrition

KW - Quality of life

KW - Rural

KW - Socioeconomic status

U2 - 10.1080/03630242.2011.584367

DO - 10.1080/03630242.2011.584367

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 21797678

AN - SCOPUS:79960898820

VL - 51

SP - 442

EP - 460

JO - Women & Health

JF - Women & Health

SN - 0363-0242

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 255455893