Food Insufficiency and Physical and Mental Health in a Longitudinal Survey of Welfare Recipients

Author:

Siefert Kristine1,Heflin Colleen M.2,Corcoran Mary E.3,Williams David R.4

Affiliation:

1. Kristine Siefert is Professor of Social Work and Associate Director of the NIMH Research Center on Poverty, Risk, and Mental Health at the University of Michigan. Her research focuses on social and environmental factors affecting the health of poor women and children and on racial/ethnic health disparities. Her current projects include studies of the impact of household food insufficiency on women's health, the health of mothers under economic stress, and social-contextual determinants of oral health...

2. Colleen M. Heflin is Assistant Professor of Public Policy at the Martin School of Public Policy and Administration at the University of Kentucky. Her research focuses on welfare and public policy, social stratification, health inequality, and women and work. Current projects include an event history analysis of determinants of food stamp receipt in the welfare population, racial variation in levels of occupational sex segregation, causes and consequences of food insecurity, and barriers to employment...

3. Mary E. Corcoran is Professor of Political Science, Public Policy, Social Work, and Women's Studies, and Senior Associate Research Scientist in the Survey Research Center at the University of Michigan. Her research focuses on race and ethnicity-based differences in women's wages and employment, on changes in welfare recipients' employment as a result of welfare reform, and on the intergenerational transmission of economic inequality.

4. David R. Williams is Harold W. Cruse Collegiate Professor of Sociology and Senior Research Scientist at the Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, at the University of Michigan. He is centrally interested in the determinants of socioeconomic and racial differences in physical and mental health. He is currently involved in projects examining discrimination and health, religious involvement and health, and the social distribution of psychiatric disorders in the United States and South Africa.

Abstract

Food insufficiency is a significant problem in the United States, and poor African American women with children are at especially high risk. An inadequate household food supply can potentially affect the well-being of household members, but it is difficult to distinguish the effects of food insufficiency from risk factors for poor health that are also common among the food insufficient, such as poverty. We examined food insufficiency and physical and mental health among African American and white women (n = 676) who were welfare recipients in 1997. Controlling for common risk factors, women who reported food insufficiency in both 1997 and 1998 were more likely to report fair or poor health at the later date. Food insufficiency in 1998 was significantly associated with meeting the diagnostic screening criteria for recent major depression. Food insufficiency at both times and in 1998 only was related to women's sense of mastery. These findings add to growing evidence that household food insufficiency is associated with poor physical and mental health.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Social Psychology

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