| Literature DB >> 26912217 |
Joseph Cox1,2,3, Anne-Marie Hamelin4, Taylor McLinden4, Erica E M Moodie4, Aranka Anema5,6, Kathleen C Rollet-Kurhajec7, Gilles Paradis4, Sean B Rourke8,9,10, Sharon L Walmsley11,12, Marina B Klein7.
Abstract
While research has begun addressing food insecurity (FI) in HIV-positive populations, knowledge regarding FI among individuals living with HIV-hepatitis C virus (HCV) co-infection is limited. This exploratory study examines sociodemographic, socioeconomic, behavioral, and clinical factors associated with FI in a cohort of HIV-HCV co-infected individuals in Canada. We analyzed longitudinal data from the Food Security and HIV-HCV Co-infection Study of the Canadian Co-infection Cohort collected between November 2012-June 2014 at 15 health centres. FI was measured using the Household Food Security Survey Module and classified using Health Canada criteria. Generalized estimating equations were used to assess factors associated with FI. Among 525 participants, 59 % experienced FI at their first study visit (baseline). Protective factors associated with FI (p < 0.05) included: enrolment at a Quebec study site (aOR: 0.42, 95 % CI: 0.27, 0.67), employment (aOR: 0.55, 95 % CI: 0.35, 0.87), and average personal monthly income (aOR per $100 CAD increase: 0.98, 95 % CI: 0.97, 0.99). Risk factors for FI included: recent injection drug use (aOR: 1.98, 95 % CI: 1.33, 2.96), trading away food (aOR: 5.23, 95 % CI: 2.53, 10.81), and recent experiences of depressive symptoms (aOR: 2.11, 95 % CI: 1.48, 3.01). FI is common in this co-infected population. Engagement of co-infected individuals in substance use treatments, harm reduction programs, and mental health services may mitigate FI in this vulnerable subset of the HIV-positive population.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; Co-infection; Food insecurity; HCV; HIV
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 26912217 PMCID: PMC5306219 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-016-1326-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Baseline descriptive characteristics and factors evaluated for their association with food insecurity in 525 HIV-HCV co-infected study participants between November 2012 and June 2014, Canada
| Characteristics | Total (N = 525) | Food secure (N = 213) | Food insecure (N = 312) | Missing obs.a | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moderate (N = 129) | Severe (N = 183) | Total (N = 312) | ||||
| Sociodemographic | Values are number of participants (%) or median (Q1, Q3) | |||||
| Age (years) | 49.1 (43.5, 54.1) | 50.4 (45.1, 55.2) | 48.1 (41.1, 52.9) | 48.5 (43.7, 53.5) | 48.4 (42.7, 53.5) | 0 |
| Male | 390 (74 %) | 170 (80 %) | 90 (70 %) | 130 (71 %) | 220 (71 %) | 0 |
| Born in Canada | 395 (75 %) | 162 (76 %) | 97 (75 %) | 136 (74 %) | 233 (75 %) | 88 |
| Province of enrolment | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| British Columbia | 171 (33 %) | 50 (24 %) | 50 (39 %) | 71 (39 %) | 121 (39 %) | 0 |
| Ontario | 95 (18 %) | 41 (19 %) | 27 (21 %) | 27 (15 %) | 54 (17 %) | 0 |
| Quebec | 248 (47 %) | 115 (54 %) | 48 (37 %) | 85 (46 %) | 133 (43 %) | 0 |
| Otherb | 11 (2 %) | 7 (3 %) | 4 (3 %) | 0 | 4 (1 %) | 0 |
| Aboriginal | 78 (15 %) | 24 (11 %) | 28 (22 %) | 26 (14 %) | 54 (17 %) | 9 |
| Heterosexual | 364 (69 %) | 138 (65 %) | 96 (74 %) | 130 (71 %) | 226 (72 %) | 0 |
| Living alonec | 274 (52 %) | 103 (48 %) | 74 (57 %) | 97 (53 %) | 171 (55 %) | 0 |
| Without a fixed addressc | 23 (4 %) | 3 (1 %) | 4 (3 %) | 16 (9 %) | 20 (6 %) | 0 |
| Recent changes in housing situationd | 140 (27 %) | 46 (22 %) | 32 (25 %) | 62 (34 %) | 94 (30 %) | 0 |
| Recent incarcerationd | 55 (10 %) | 15 (7 %) | 14 (11 %) | 26 (14 %) | 40 (13 %) | 0 |
| Socioeconomic | ||||||
| Employmentc | 97 (19 %) | 64 (30 %) | 21 (16 %) | 12 (7 %) | 33 (11 %) | 0 |
| Average personal monthly income ($ CAD)d | 1015 (918, 1400) | 1111 (934, 2500) | 1100 (918, 1300) | 966 (897, 1100) | 1000 (916, 1200) | 3 |
| More than high school education | 132 (25 %) | 75 (35 %) | 21 (16 %) | 36 (20 %) | 57 (18 %) | 0 |
| Behavioral | ||||||
| Recent injection drug used | 180 (34 %) | 44 (21 %) | 48 (37 %) | 88 (48 %) | 136 (44 %) | 0 |
| Marijuana usec | 287 (55 %) | 94 (44 %) | 68 (53 %) | 125 (68 %) | 193 (62 %) | 0 |
| Cigarette usec | 372 (71 %) | 132 (62 %) | 96 (74 %) | 144 (79 %) | 240 (77 %) | 46 |
| Alcohol usec | 306 (58 %) | 115 (54 %) | 74 (57 %) | 117 (64 %) | 191 (61 %) | 45 |
| | 96 (18 %) | 21 (10 %) | 26 (20 %) | 49 (27 %) | 75 (24 %) | 48 |
| Trading away foodd,e | 75 (14 %) | 6 (3 %) | 18 (14 %) | 51 (28 %) | 69 (22 %) | 0 |
| Use of food assistance (in the past month) | 346 (66 %) | 82 (38 %) | 109 (84 %) | 155 (85 %) | 264 (85 %) | 0 |
| Doing the following for foodd | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Borrowing money | 224 (43 %) | 25 (12 %) | 65 (50 %) | 134 (73 %) | 199 (64 %) | 0 |
| Going through garbage | 25 (5 %) | 1 (<1 %) | 5 (4 %) | 19 (10 %) | 24 (8 %) | 0 |
| Stealing | 64 (12 %) | 4 (2 %) | 13 (10 %) | 47 (26 %) | 60 (19 %) | 0 |
| Begging | 60 (11 %) | 3 (1 %) | 9 (7 %) | 48 (26 %) | 57 (18 %) | 0 |
| Selling or trading items | 104 (20 %) | 5 (2 %) | 23 (18 %) | 76 (42 %) | 99 (32 %) | 0 |
| Having sex for food | 22 (4 %) | 2 (1 %) | 4 (3 %) | 16 (9 %) | 20 (6 %) | 0 |
| Trading substances | 52 (10 %) | 3 (1 %) | 11 (9 %) | 38 (21 %) | 49 (16 %) | 0 |
| Delaying payments | 115 (22 %) | 7 (3 %) | 22 (17 %) | 86 (47 %) | 108 (35 %) | 0 |
| Clinical | ||||||
| HIV infection duration (years) | 15.5 (10.3, 20.7) | 16.7 (10.4, 22.3) | 14.5 (9.9, 19.9) | 15.2 (10.3, 19.3) | 15.0 (10.3, 19.4) | 23 |
| HCV infection duration (years) | 23.1 (15.7, 30.7) | 22.9 (11.2, 30.1) | 22.0 (16.9, 31.2) | 24.0 (17.2, 30.7) | 23.3 (17.1, 31.0) | 0 |
| CD4 count (cells/µL) | 460 (310, 680) | 493.5 (320, 705) | 466 (314, 692) | 432 (300, 620) | 446 (300, 632) | 7 |
| HIV RNA (<50 copies/mL) | 412 (78 %) | 172 (81 %) | 105 (81 %) | 135 (74 %) | 240 (77 %) | 16 |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 23.7 (21.2, 27.2) | 24.1 (21.4, 27.6) | 24.2 (22.1, 27.4) | 23.3 (20.7, 26.6) | 23.6 (21.1, 27.0) | 67 |
| End-stage liver disease diagnosisf | 82 (16 %) | 39 (18 %) | 13 (10 %) | 30 (16 %) | 43 (14 %) | 0 |
| AIDS-defining illness diagnosisf | 146 (28 %) | 66 (31 %) | 33 (26 %) | 47 (26 %) | 80 (26 %) | 0 |
| HCV treatment naïvef | 331 (63 %) | 113 (53 %) | 93 (72 %) | 125 (68 %) | 218 (70 %) | 0 |
| Taking cARTc | 484 (92 %) | 201 (94 %) | 123 (95 %) | 160 (87 %) | 283 (91 %) | 0 |
| Missing cART doses (in the past 4 days) | 110 (21 %) | 31 (15 %) | 28 (22 %) | 51 (28 %) | 79 (25 %) | 0 |
| Self-described health state—visual analogue scale (0–100)c | 70 (55, 80) | 75 (60, 85) | 70 (50, 80) | 65 (50, 75) | 70 (50, 80) | 4 |
| Therapy for drug addictiond | 97 (19 %) | 27 (13 %) | 21 (16 %) | 49 (27 %) | 70 (22 %) | 29 |
| Recent depressive symptoms (CES-D-10) (in the past week) | 276 (53 %) | 76 (36 %) | 67 (52 %) | 133 (73 %) | 200 (64 %) | 13 |
| Unmet healthcare needsd | 95 (18 %) | 19 (9 %) | 26 (20 %) | 50 (27 %) | 76 (24 %) | 0 |
| Healthcare usaged | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Emergency room visit | 144 (27 %) | 48 (23 %) | 40 (31 %) | 56 (31 %) | 96 (31 %) | 0 |
| Hospitalization | 75 (14 %) | 23 (11 %) | 20 (16 %) | 32 (17 %) | 52 (17 %) | 0 |
aNumber of observations missing at the baseline assessment
bProvinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Nova Scotia
cReference period: currently
dReference period: in the past 6 months
eTrading away food for: tobacco, personal or household items, drugs, alcohol, sex, a place to stay
fReference period: lifetime
Univariate and multivariate logistic regression models of factors associated with food insecurity in 525 HIV-HCV co-infected study participants between November 2012 and June 2014, Canada
| Univariate OR (95 % CI)a |
| Multivariate aOR (95 % CI) |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sociodemographic | ||||
| Intercept | – | – | 4.78 (0.98, 23.41) | 0.054 |
| Age: per 5-year increase | 0.85 (0.77, 0.94) | <0.001 | 0.90 (0.81, 1.00) | 0.057 |
| Male | 1.58 (1.07, 2.31) | 0.020 | 1.26 (0.78, 2.04) | 0.343 |
| Born in Canada | 1.09 (0.62, 1.91) | 0.764 | – | – |
| Province of enrolment | – | – | – | – |
| British Columbia | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. |
| Ontario | 0.50 (0.31, 0.81) | 0.005 | 0.74 (0.43, 1.27) | 0.275 |
| Quebec | 0.45 (0.30, 0.65) | <0.001 | 0.42 (0.27, 0.67) | <0.001* |
| Otherc | 0.24 (0.07, 0.84) | 0.025 | 0.49 (0.14, 1.73) | 0.265 |
| Aboriginal | 1.75 (1.08, 2.82) | 0.022 | 1.12 (0.58, 2.13) | 0.759 |
| Heterosexual | 1.52 (1.07, 2.16) | 0.019 | 1.12 (0.73, 1.70) | 0.605 |
| Living aloned | 1.44 (1.09, 1.89) | 0.010 | 1.31 (0.92, 1.87) | 0.128 |
| Without a fixed addressd | 2.19 (1.16, 4.14) | 0.016 | 1.19 (0.50, 2.84) | 0.689 |
| Recent changes in housing situatione | 1.44 (1.06, 1.95) | 0.021 | 1.11 (0.73, 1.68) | 0.635 |
| Recent incarceratione | 1.96 (1.14, 3.36) | 0.015 | 1.11 (0.59, 2.08) | 0.749 |
| Socioeconomic | ||||
| Employmentd | 0.34 (0.24, 0.49) | <0.001 | 0.55 (0.35, 0.87) | 0.010* |
| Average personal monthly income ($ CAD): per $100 increasee | 0.96 (0.93, 0.99) | 0.012 | 0.98 (0.97, 0.99) | 0.001* |
| More than high school education | 0.45 (0.30, 0.66) | <0.001 | 0.72 (0.45, 1.13) | 0.155 |
| Behavioral | ||||
| Recent injection drug usee | 2.79 (2.02, 3.85) | <0.001 | 1.98 (1.33, 2.96) | <0.001* |
| Marijuana used | 1.82 (1.37, 2.42) | <0.001 | 1.41 (0.99, 2.01) | 0.060 |
| Cigarette used | 1.67 (1.18, 2.35) | 0.004 | 0.98 (0.65, 1.50) | 0.940 |
| Alcohol used | 1.28 (0.97, 1.67) | 0.077 | 1.21 (0.84, 1.75) | 0.301 |
| | 1.55 (1.06, 2.25) | 0.023 | 1.21 (0.75, 1.94) | 0.433 |
| Trading away foode,f | 5.99 (3.53, 10.16) | <0.001 | 5.23 (2.53, 10.81) | <0.001* |
| Clinical | ||||
| Taking cARTd | 0.52 (0.31, 0.88) | 0.015 | 0.68 (0.36, 1.29) | 0.237 |
| Self-described health state—visual analogue scale (0–100): per 5-point increased | 0.93 (0.89, 0.96) | <0.001 | 0.98 (0.94, 1.02) | 0.242 |
| Therapy for drug addictione | 1.16 (0.79, 1.71) | 0.452 | – | – |
| Recent depressive symptoms (CES-D-10) (in the past week) | 2.78 (2.06, 3.74) | <0.001 | 2.11 (1.48, 3.01) | <0.001* |
| Unmet healthcare needse | 2.25 (1.55, 3.26) | <0.001 | 1.55 (0.93, 2.57) | 0.091 |
a OR odds ratios, 95 % CI confidence intervals, and aOR adjusted ORs estimated from logistic regression models (outcome: food secure vs. food insecure) using GEE
bFactors p < 0.1 in univariate models were included in the multivariate model
cProvinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Nova Scotia
dReference period: currently
eReference period: in the past 6 months
fTrading away food for: tobacco, personal or household items, drugs, alcohol, sex, a place to stay
* p < 0.05