| Literature DB >> 19644748 |
Sheri D Weiser1, David R Bangsberg, Susan Kegeles, Kathleen Ragland, Margot B Kushel, Edward A Frongillo.
Abstract
Food insecurity is a risk factor for both HIV transmission and worse HIV clinical outcomes. We examined the prevalence of and factors associated with food insecurity among homeless and marginally housed HIV-infected individuals in San Francisco recruited from the Research on Access to Care in the Homeless Cohort. We used multiple logistic regression to determine socio-demographic and behavioral factors associated with food insecurity, which was measured using the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale. Among 250 participants, over half (53.6%) were food insecure. Higher odds of food insecurity was associated with being white, low CD4 counts, recent crack use, lack of health insurance, and worse physical and mental health. Food insecurity is highly prevalent among HIV-infected marginally housed individuals in San Francisco, and is associated with poor physical and mental health and poor social functioning. Screening for and addressing food insecurity should be a critical component of HIV prevention and treatment programs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19644748 PMCID: PMC2758196 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-009-9597-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Participant characteristics
| Characteristic | All participants | Food insecure | Food secure | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White | 80 (32.0%) | 51 (38.1%) | 29 (25.0%) | 4.87 (0.027) |
| Male | 174 (69.6%) | 91 (67.9%) | 83 (71.6%) | 0.39 (0.533) |
| ≥High school education | 172 (68.8%) | 92 (68.7%) | 80 (69.0%) | 0.003 (0.958) |
| Income (≥median of 855$/month) | 125 (50.0%) | 69 (51.5%) | 56 (48.3%) | 0.26 (0.612) |
| Recent incarceration | 11 (4.4%) | 8 (5.6%) | 3 (2.6%) | 1.69 (0.230) |
| Recent homelessness | 23 (9.2%) | 15 (11.2%) | 8 (6.9%) | 1.37 (0.278) |
| Recent crack | 70 (28.0%) | 48 (35.8%) | 22 (19.0%) | 8.76 (0.003) |
| Recent heroin | 21 (8.4%) | 15 (11.2%) | 6 (5.2%) | 2.93 (0.110) |
| Recent speed | 36 (14.4%) | 23 (17.2%) | 13 (11.2%) | 1.79 (0.181) |
| Problem drinking | 24 (9.6%) | 14 (10.5%) | 10 (8.6%) | 0.26 (0.671) |
| Delayed HAART initiation | 129 (51.6%) | 76 (56.7%) | 53 (45.7%) | 3.03 (0.082) |
| Representative payee | 102 (40.8%) | 60 (44.8%) | 42 (36.2%) | 1.89 (0.169) |
| Employed | 15 (6.0%) | 9 (6.7%) | 6 (5.2%) | 0.26 (0.791) |
| Lack of any health insurance | 13 (5.2%) | 10 (7.5%) | 3 (2.6%) | 3.00 (0.083) |
| Depression | 98 (39.2%) | 62 (46.3%) | 36 (31.0%) | 6.05 (0.014) |
| Sex exchange | 10 (4.0%) | 9 (6.7%) | 1 (0.9%) | 4.48 (0.040) |
| Living with children | 7 (2.8%) | 2 (1.5%) | 5 (4.4%) | 1.85 (0.254) |
| Receipt of food aid | 148 (59.9%) | 85 (64.4%) | 63 (54.8%) | 2.36 (0.032) |
| CD4 < 200 | 65 (26.2%) | 44 (67.7%) | 21 (32.3%) | 6.62 (0.010) |
P values compare any food insecure versus all other participants for each characteristic
Factors associated with food insecurity among homeless and marginally housed HIV-infected participants in San Francisco (n = 250)
| Characteristic | Odds ratioa (OR) (.95 CI) | Adjusted ORa (.95 CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Recent homelessness (past 30 days) | 1.70 (0.69, 4.17) | – |
| Age (per year) | 0.99 (0.96, 1.03) | – |
| White (versus nonwhite) | 1.84 (1.07, 3.18) | 2.03 (1.11, 3.71) |
| Male (versus female) | 0.84 (0.49, 1.45) | – |
| ≥High school education | 0.99 (0.58, 1.69) | – |
| Employed | 1.32 (0.46, 3.83) | – |
| Income ≥ mean | 1.14 (0.69, 1.87) | – |
| Recent incarceration | 2.39 (0.62, 9.23) | 3.97 (0.95, 16.57) |
| Lack of health insurance | 3.04 (0.82, 11.32) | 4.38 (1.21, 19.75) |
| Has Payee | 1.43 (0.86, 2.38) | – |
| Delayed HAART initiation | 1.56 (0.94, 2.57) | – |
| Crack use past 30 days | 2.38 (1.33, 4.27) | 2.06 (1.09, 3.91) |
| Heroine use past 30 days | 2.31 (0.87, 6.16) | – |
| Speed use past 30 days | 1.64 (0.79, 3.41) | – |
| Problem drinking | 1.25 (0.53, 2.93) | – |
| BDI score ≥ 14 | 1.91 (1.14, 3.22) | – |
| PCS for SF-36 (per 10 units) | 0.72 (0.58–0.90) | 0.74 (0.58–0.94) |
| MCS for SF-36 (per 10 units) | 0.71 (0.58–0.88) | 0.68 (0.54–0.85) |
| Sex exchange | 8.28 (1.03, 66.37) | – |
| Number of friends in social network | 1.11 (0.97, 1.27) | – |
| Living with children (past 30 days) | 0.33 (0.06, 1.75) | – |
| Receipt of food aid (past 30 days) | 1.49 (0.90, 2.49) | – |
| CD4 < 200 | 2.17 (1.19, 3.93) | 2.08 (1.09, 3.94) |
BDI beck depression inventory, PCS physical health composite score, MCS mental health composite score
aLogistic regression
Groups resulting from analysis using classification and regression trees to predict food-insecure homeless and marginally housed HIV-infected participants
| Group | Percentage of sample | Percent food insecure | Predictors | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MCS | PCS | CD4 | |||
| 1 | 40.4 | 38.7 | >48.9 | ||
| 2 | 27.2 | 42.7 | ≤48.9 | >36.6 | ≥200 |
| 3 | 9.2 | 73.9 | ≤48.9 | >36.6 | <200 |
| 4 | 23.2 | 84.5 | ≤48.9 | ≤36.6 | |
Estimate of misclassification in this sample: 33% (SE 3%)
Cross-validation estimate of misclassification for future similar sample: 46% (SE 3%)