| Literature DB >> 34321134 |
Julia A Wolfson1,2, Noura Insolera3, Alicia Cohen4,5, Cindy W Leung6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the effect of food insecurity during college on graduation and degree attainment.Entities:
Keywords: College; Educational attainment; First-generation student status; Food insecurity; Graduation; Panel Study of Income Dynamics
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34321134 PMCID: PMC8855347 DOI: 10.1017/S1368980021003104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Nutr ISSN: 1368-9800 Impact factor: 4.022
Characteristics of the study sample, PSID (n 1574)
| All | Food-secure | Food-insecure | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| % |
| % |
| % |
| |
| Total | 1574 | 100 % | 1257 | 85·1 | 317 | 14·9 | |
| 1999–2003 | |||||||
| Age | 0·656 | ||||||
| Mean | 21·62 | 21·61 | 21·75 | ||||
| | 0·13 | 0·13 | 0·31 | ||||
| Income to needs ratio | < 0·001 | ||||||
| Mean | 5·23 | 5·78 | 2·18 | ||||
|
| 23·3 | 0·26 | 0·13 | ||||
| Sex | |||||||
| Male | 648 | 45·5 | 526 | 45·8 | 122 | 43·7 | 0·64 |
| Female | 926 | 54·5 | 731 | 54·2 | 195 | 56·3 | |
| Race/ethnicity | |||||||
| Non-Hispanic White | 892 | 73·9 | 796 | 78 | 96 | 50·7 | < 0·001 |
| Other | 562 | 16·2 | 368 | 12·3 | 194 | 38·5 | |
| First-generation student | |||||||
| Yes | 959 | 54·3 | 699 | 50·4 | 260 | 77 | < 0·001 |
| No | 615 | 45·7 | 558 | 49·6 | 57 | 23 | |
| Household position | |||||||
| Head/spouse/partner | 306 | 21·6 | 234 | 20 | 72 | 30·4 | < 0·001 |
| Institutional OFUM | 338 | 22·6 | 297 | 24·8 | 41 | 10·2 | |
| OFUM | 930 | 55·8 | 726 | 55·2 | 204 | 59·3 | |
| 2015/2017 | |||||||
| College degree completion | |||||||
| Yes | 939 | 64·5 | 805 | 68·1 | 134 | 43·8 | < 0·001 |
| No | 635 | 35·5 | 452 | 31·9 | 183 | 56·2 | |
| Highest degree achieved | |||||||
| Associate’s degree | 189 | 11·4 | 151 | 10·9 | 38 | 13·9 | < 0·001 |
| Bachelor’s degree | 472 | 33·6 | 411 | 35·8 | 61 | 21·1 | |
| Graduate/professional degree | 263 | 19·2 | 233 | 21·2 | 30 | 7·6 | |
OFUM, Other Family Unit Member.
P-values are from weighted chi-squared tests.
Associations between food insecurity and college completion and degree attained, PSID (n 1574)
| Model 1 | Model 2 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Food insecurity | OR | 95 % CI |
| OR | 95 % CI |
|
| College degree completion | ||||||
| Yes | 0·461 | 0·304, 0·701 | 0·001 | 0·574 | 0·374, 0·882 | 0·013 |
| Highest degree achieved | RRR | 95 % CI |
| RRR | 95 % CI |
|
| Associate’s degree | 0·662 | 0·308, 1·422 | 0·281 | 0·633 | 0·301, 1·331 | 0·220 |
| Bachelor’s degree | 0·453 | 0·299, 0·689 | < 0·001 | 0·568 | 0·353, 0·916 | 0·022 |
| Graduate/professional degree | 0·253 | 0·116, 0·552 | 0·001 | 0·388 | 0·174, 0·864 | 0·022 |
| First-generation status | ||||||
| College degree completion | OR | 95 % CI |
| OR | 95 % CI |
|
| Yes | 0·435 | 0·307, 0·615 | < 0·001 | |||
| Highest degree achieved | RRR | 95 % CI |
| RRR | 95 % CI |
|
| Associate’s degree | 1·114 | 0·689, 1·887 | 0·601 | |||
| Bachelor’s degree | 0·428 | 0·294, 0·623 | < 0·001 | |||
| Graduate/professional degree | 0·213 | 0·130, 0·348 | < 0·001 | |||
RRR, relative risk ratio.
Model 1: Logit (for degree completion) and multinomial logit (for degree type) models adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity and household position (HSP, Institutional OFUM).
Model 2: Logit (for degree completion) and multinomial logit (for degree type) models adjusted for Model 1 covariates plus first-generation students status and income to needs ratio.
Food insecurity defined as marginal, low and very low food security status.
Fifteen people are missing degree information.
Fig. 1Predicted probability of college degree completion by food security and first-generation student status: , food-secure; , food-insecure. Note: Post-estimation margins from the interaction between food security and first-generation status from a logit model including an interaction between food security status and first-generation status adjusted for household position, age, sex, race and income to needs ratio. *Differences between food secure and food insecure (within first-generation status) significant at P < 0·05. †Differences between first-generation status (within food security status) significant at P < 0·05
Fig. 2Predicted probability of type of degree completed by food security and first-generation status: , food-secure; , food-insecure. Note: Results are post-estimation margins after a multinomial logit model including an interaction between food security and first-generation status and adjusted for household position, age, sex, race and income to needs ratio. *Within each degree outcome, differences between food-secure and food-insecure (within first-generation status) significant at P < 0·05. †Within each degree outcome, differences between first-generation status (within food security status) significant at P < 0·05