Rates of food insecurity in US may be significantly higher than surveys suggest
New research spearheaded by USC Dornsife's Public Exchange suggests that rates of food insecurity may be under-reported by as much as one-third and that surveying more frequently to ask people about their recent experiences could produce better results.
2023-04-12
(Press-News.org)
Key Points
Many federal and local government agencies send out a United States Department of Agriculture survey once a year or less to determine whether households experienced food insecurity in the last 12 months.
In a new study, USC researchers found that households are more likely to accurately report food insecurity when surveyed more often and asked about their recent experiences. They also found that the USDA measure may be underreporting the true rate by as much as one-third.
Without accurate data, policymakers can’t make informed decisions to address the causes and consequences of food insecurity.
During the first few years of the Covid-19 pandemic, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and some local governments may have underreported the percentage of Americans who experienced food insecurity by up to one-third. That’s the finding from a new study spearheaded by the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences' Public Exchange, funded by the National Science Foundation and published by the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
Food insecurity is defined as not having access to enough food to maintain an active and healthy lifestyle for all individuals in a household.
At the end of every year, the USDA collects data from American households about food spending, access to food, and other topics through its Current Population Survey. These data showed national food insecurity rates did not change significantly between 2019 (10.5%), 2020 (10.5%), and 2021 (10.2%). For California, the USDA reported that food insecurity declined one percentage point in 2019-2021 from 10.6% in 2016-2018.
The USDA’s recent data for California is in stark contrast to data from Los Angeles County, collected weekly by the USC research team and the U.S. Census' Household Pulse Survey. For example, the data from the Household Pulse Survey suggests that from February to April-May of 2020, L.A. County’s food insecurity rate more than doubled to 21.8%.
Investigating the frequency with which people are surveyed, and therefore how far back in time they are asked to recall, might explain the significant discrepancy between the USDA’s California data and the available data for L.A. County. Researchers with USC asked Los Angeles County residents questions related to their recent food security experiences 11 times throughout 2021. They found that in December, one-third of respondents who had reported food insecurity earlier in the year did not report it again when asked if they had experienced food insecurity at any point that year.
"Memory plays a key role in accuracy,” said Kayla de la Haye, the lead researcher and associate professor of population and public health sciences at Keck School of Medicine of USC. “That’s why the time frame during which a survey is conducted is vital, as recall is biased against events that are less frequent or further away.”
Based on their findings, de la Haye and her colleagues believe the USDA and other government health departments may be under-reporting the true extent of food insecurity by one-third.
“Policymakers are ill-prepared to address the causes of food insecurity and to develop effective solutions if they don’t have accurate data,” said Michelle Livings, a Ph.D. candidate at USC Dornsife Spatial Sciences Institute. “That’s why it’s so important for government organizations who are doing public health surveillance to reevaluate the frequency with which they survey people on this issue.”
To improve the accuracy of food insecurity estimates, the researchers recommend that the USDA and other agencies conduct surveys multiple times a year that ask people about their experiences of food insecurity for shorter time periods. For example, over the past week or past month. Further research is needed to determine the optimal recall period for food insecurity surveys.
The report identifies areas for future research, including:
How under-reporting food insecurity may lead to underestimating its impacts on population health.
To what degree under-reporting of food insecurity within communities of color impacts efforts to document and address food access inequities.
Why individuals with higher incomes were more likely to under-report food insecurity. END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2023-04-12
ITHACA, N.Y. – Can humans endure long-term living in deep space? The answer is a lukewarm maybe, according to a new theory describing the complexity of maintaining gravity and oxygen, obtaining water, developing agriculture and handling waste far from Earth.
Dubbed the Pancosmorio theory – a word coined to mean “all world limit” – it was described in a paper published in Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences.
“For humans to sustain themselves and all of their technology, infrastructure and society in space, they need a ...
2023-04-12
COLUMBUS, Ohio – James P. Allison, PhD, is the recipient of the 25th Herbert and Maxine Block Memorial Lectureship Award for Distinguished Achievement in Cancer. A 2018 Nobel Prize co-recipient in physiology/medicine, Allison serves as the chair of immunology and executive director of the Immunotherapy Platform at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
He is a renowned immunologist whose research led to the discovery of the immune system’s T-cell receptor structure and later a molecule ...
2023-04-12
Permanent magnets, the kind found on refrigerators everywhere, exist because their constituent atoms behave as miniature magnets. They align and combine to form the larger magnet in a phenomenon called ferromagnetism. There are some materials where the atomic magnets instead form an alternating pattern, so the material has no net magnetization. Such antiferromagnets have attracted attention for their potential to create faster and more compact magnetic memory devices for computing.
Realizing the full potential of antiferromagnetic devices will require sensing their atom-to-atom magnetic patterns, ...
2023-04-12
DETROIT (April 12, 2023) – Henry Ford Hospital structural heart interventional cardiologists Pedro Villablanca, M.D., and Brian O’Neill, M.D., are the first in the U.S. to successfully implant the new transcatheter tricuspid valve replacement device LuX-Valve Plus™ for the treatment of patients with symptomatic tricuspid valve disease for whom traditional open-heart surgery is too high of a risk.
“These are patients with severe tricuspid regurgitation who have no other options available to them in the U.S., based on the anatomy of their native valve and medical complexities,” ...
2023-04-12
Dynamic control of terahertz (THz) waves at-will with an ultracompact device is important for THz technologies in biomedical imaging, telecommunications, detection, and beyond. However, tunable THz devices made of conventional materials are usually bulky, and they tend to have limited modulation depths and functionalities, due to weak interactions between naturally existing materials and THz waves. Metasurfaces – functional materials endowed with unparalleled flexibility to manipulate light at the deep-subwavelength scale – provide ...
2023-04-12
Dopamine, a brain chemical long associated with pleasure, motivation and reward-seeking, also appears to play an important role in why exercise and other physical efforts feel “easy” to some people and exhausting to others, according to results of a study of people with Parkinson’s disease led by Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers. Parkinson’s disease is marked by a loss of dopamine-producing cells in the brain over time.
The findings, published online April 1 in NPG Parkinson’s Disease, could, the researchers say, eventually lead to more effective ways to help people establish and stick with exercise ...
2023-04-12
BOSTON – There were more than 100,000 reported deaths from opioid overdoses in 2021, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Methadone treatment remains one of the most reliable means of treating opioid use disorder, with success rates reportedly ranging from 60 to 90 percent for patients who stick with the long-term regimen. Adherence, though, remains a challenge.
In a novel randomized clinical trial published in JAMA Network Open, senior author Ted J. Kaptchuk at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center ...
2023-04-12
ORLANDO, April 12, 2023 – A University of Central Florida researcher will be using the newly constructed Two-meter Twin Telescope (TTT) in the Canary Islands, Spain, to study metal-rich M-type asteroids.
The work can inform the study of asteroids like 16 Psyche, an M-type, or metal, asteroid NASA is launching a mission in October 2023 to visit.
The M-type asteroids offer both high concentrations of metals that could be harnessed to make structures in space as well as clues to the formation of ...
2023-04-12
As the number of children in need of access to timely evaluation and intervention for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) continues to rise, new research is showing how barriers to diagnoses and treatment can be reduced through an innovative training program first developed at the University of Missouri.
ASD can be identified and diagnosed in young children by a well-trained clinician, and early diagnosis is vital to quickly establishing access to evidence-based therapies and interventions. However, long specialty center waitlists, distance, and ...
2023-04-12
HOUSTON ― The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center’s Research Highlights showcases the latest breakthroughs in cancer care, research and prevention. These advances are made possible through seamless collaboration between MD Anderson’s world-leading clinicians and scientists, bringing discoveries from the lab to the clinic and back.
This special edition features presentations by MD Anderson researchers at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2023. In addition to these studies, forthcoming press releases will feature groundbreaking research on perioperative immunotherapy for operable lung cancer (Abstract CT005), ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Rates of food insecurity in US may be significantly higher than surveys suggest
New research spearheaded by USC Dornsife's Public Exchange suggests that rates of food insecurity may be under-reported by as much as one-third and that surveying more frequently to ask people about their recent experiences could produce better results.