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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Food Insecurity and Eating Behavior Relationships Among Congregate Meal Participants in Georgia

, MS, RDN, , PhD, RDN, , PhD, RDN, , PhD, RD, , PhD, RDN & , PhD
Pages 32-42
Published online: 17 Feb 2016

ABSTRACT

This study explored relationships of food insecurity with cognitive restraint, uncontrolled eating, and emotional eating behaviors among congregate meal participants in northeast Georgia [n = 118 years, age 60 years and older, mean (SD) age = 75 (8 Olson CM, Bove CF, Miller EO. Growing up poor: long-term implications for eating patterns and body weight. Appetite. 2007; 49(1):198207.[Crossref], [PubMed], [Web of Science ®] [Google Scholar]) years, 75% female, 43% Black, 53% obese (Body Mass Index ≥ 30)]. Food insecurity was assessed with a 6-item questionnaire. Scores ranged from 0 to 6 and were defined as high or marginal food security, FS, 0–1 (70%); low food security, LFS, 2–4 (20%); very low food security, VLFS, 5–6 (10%); and low and very low food security, LVLFS, 2–6 (30%). Eating behavior was assessed with an 18-item Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire R-18. In bivariate analyses food insecurity was consistently associated with cognitive restraint scores above the median split and to a lesser extent with uncontrolled eating scores (p ≤ 0.05). No association was found between emotional eating and food insecurity. In multivariate linear and logistic regression analyses, food insecurity was consistently associated with cognitive restraint (p ≤ 0.05) even when controlled for potential confounders (demographics, Body Mass Index, and chronic diseases). Food insecurity was also associated with uncontrolled eating (p ≤ 0.05), but the relationship was attenuated when controlled for potential confounding variables. Although cognitive restraint is defined as the conscious restriction of food intake to control body weight or promote weight loss, these findings suggest there may be other dimensions of cognitive restraint to consider in nutritional assessment and interventions among food-insecure older adults.

Additional information

Funding

Partial support for this research was provided by ARCS Foundation, Atlanta, GA; Northeast Georgia Area Agency on Aging; USDA NIFA GEO-00708; and NIH grant 5T32 AG00029-35.

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