Food insecurity doubled likelihood of foregoing or delaying medical care during first year of COVID-19 pandemic in U.S.
Survey conducted in December 2020 also found minorities and low-income individuals were at elevated risk of food insecurity
Date:
April 14, 2022
Source:
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health
Summary:
Individuals with food insecurity were also two to three times
more likely to have delayed or foregone specific types of care,
including skipping a recommended treatment, test or follow-up visit,
and not filling a prescription, according to a new study.
FULL STORY ========================================================================== Individuals experiencing food insecurity -- a household's lack of
consistent access to adequate food resources -- in the U.S. during the
first year of the pandemic were more than twice as likely to forego
or delay medical care due to cost concerns compared to food-secure
households, according to a survey led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
========================================================================== Conducted in December 2020, the survey also found that racial and ethnic minority groups and lower-income individuals were significantly more
likely to face food insecurity compared to whites and higher-income individuals.
The findings were published online April 13 in the American Journal of
Public Health.
For their study, the researchers conducted a nationally representative
online survey of 8,481 adults aged 18 and older between December 15 and December 21, 2020. The researchers found that nearly one in five adults
-- 18.8 percent - - reported experiencing food insecurity at some point
during the previous 30 days. Of those experiencing food insecurity,
nearly 3 in 10 (27.4 percent) reported delaying or foregoing medical
care in the last month.
In addition to delaying any medical care during the prior month,
individuals with food insecurity were also two to three times more
likely to have delayed or foregone specific types of care during the
first nine months of the pandemic, including skipping a treatment or
test recommended by a doctor, not going to a recommended follow-up visit,
and not filling a prescription.
The link between food insecurity and foregoing medical treatment is well documented. This study is thought to be the first to investigate this relationship during the pandemic.
==========================================================================
"We already know that people who struggle with maintaining a healthy
diet are at higher risk of many health problems, including those that
can make them more vulnerable to COVID-19," says Jaclyn Bertoldo, MPH,
RDN, the lead author of the study and a Bloomberg American Health Fellow
and DrPH student at the Bloomberg School. "Delaying or postponing care
could compound the risk of COVID-19 complications and contribute to
widening health disparities in the pandemic and well after it ends." The researchers also found that food insecurity disproportionately affected
racial and ethnic minority groups and low-income people. Non-Hispanic
Blacks were nearly two times as likely as whites to face food insecurity,
and Hispanics more than one and a half times as likely as whites. People
who had lost a job or more than half of their income due to the pandemic
were three and a half times more likely to experience food insecurity.
"Individuals experiencing food insecurity often make difficult tradeoffs between food and other basic needs, including health care," says Julia
Wolfson, PhD, co-lead author of the study and an assistant professor in
the Department of International Health at the Bloomberg School. "Policies
to help offset the cost of food, such as Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Benefits, or food stamps, are critical to provide food insecure households
with needed money." The authors note that tying SNAP benefits to
inflation and more frequently adjusting benefit levels is important to
help low-income families afford the true cost of food. They also add
that continuing to expand access to Medicaid and working toward more
affordable health insurance and prescription drug prices can also help low-income families avoid needing to choose between health care and food.
This survey was part of the National Pandemic Pulse project, a series
of comprehensive surveys led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins
University. Begun in September 2020, the series' surveys measure
disparities and inequities in the experience and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Food insecurity and delayed or foregone medical care during the COVID-19 pandemic" was written by Jaclyn Bertoldo, Julia A. Wolfson, Samantha M.
Sundermeir, Jeffrey Edwards, Dustin Gibson, Smisha Agarwal, and Alain
Labrique.
The study was funded by the Johnson & Johnson Foundation through the
National Pandemic Pulse project.
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Johns_Hopkins_University_Bloomberg_School_of_Public Health. Note:
Content may be edited for style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Jaclyn Bertoldo, Julia A. Wolfson, Samantha M. Sundermeir, Jeffrey
Edwards, Dustin Gibson, Smisha Agarwal, Alain Labrique. Food
Insecurity and Delayed or Forgone Medical Care During the COVID-19
Pandemic.
American Journal of Public Health, 2022; 112 (5): 776 DOI: 10.2105/
AJPH.2022.306724 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/04/220414105749.htm
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