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Food Insecurity and Diet Quality Among Adults on Medicaid With and Without a Mental Illness Diagnosis.

Authors :
Anderson, Emma
McCurley, Jessica L.
Sonnenblick, Ross
McGovern, Sydney
Fung, Vicki
Levy, Douglas E.
Clark, Cheryl R.
Thorndike, Anne N.
Source :
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition & Dietetics. Oct2023, Vol. 123 Issue 10, p1470-1470. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Adults with mental illnesses are more likely to have low income and diet-related chronic diseases. This study examined associations of mental illness diagnosis status with food insecurity and diet quality and whether the relationship between food security status and diet quality differed by mental illness diagnosis status in adult Medicaid beneficiaries. This was a secondary cross-sectional analysis of baseline (2019–2020) data collected as part of the LiveWell study, a longitudinal study evaluating a Medicaid food and housing program. Participants were 846 adult Medicaid beneficiaries from an eastern Massachusetts health system. Food security was measured with the 10-item US Adult Food Security survey module (0 = high food security, 1–2 = marginal food security, 3–10 = low/very low food security). Mental illness diagnoses included health record–documented anxiety, depression, or serious mental illness (eg, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder). Healthy Eating Index (HEI-2015) scores were calculated from 24-hour dietary recalls. Multivariable regression analyses adjusted for demographics, income, and survey date. Participants' mean (standard deviation) age was 43.1 (11.3) years, and 75% were female, 54% Hispanic, 33% non-Hispanic White, and 9% non-Hispanic Black. Fewer than half (43%) of participants reported high food security, with almost one third (32%) reporting low or very low food security. The 341 (40%) participants with one or more mental illness diagnosis had greater odds of low/very low food security (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 1.94; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.38–2.70) and had similar mean HEI-2015 scores (53.1 vs 56.0; P = 0.12) compared with participants with no mental illness diagnosis. Mean adjusted HEI-2015 scores did not significantly differ by high vs low/very low food security for those without a mental illness diagnosis (57.9 vs 54.9; P = 0.052) or those with a mental illness diagnosis (53.0 vs 52.9; P = 0.99). In a cohort of adults with Medicaid, those with mental illness diagnoses had higher odds of experiencing food insecurity. Overall, diet quality among adults in this sample was low but did not differ by mental illness diagnosis or food security status. These results highlight the importance of augmenting efforts to improve both food security and diet quality among all Medicaid participants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22122672
Volume :
123
Issue :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition & Dietetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
171902401
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jand.2023.05.017