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      Risk and protective factors for adult and child hunger among low-income housed and homeless female-headed families.

      American Journal of Public Health
      Adult, Case-Control Studies, Child, Child Welfare, economics, Demography, Female, Food Supply, Health Status, Homeless Persons, Housing, standards, Humans, Hunger, Massachusetts, epidemiology, Mother-Child Relations, Mothers, psychology, statistics & numerical data, Odds Ratio, Parenting, Poverty, Prevalence, Public Assistance, Risk Factors

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          Abstract

          We sought to identify factors associated with adult or child hunger. Low-income housed and homeless mothers were interviewed about socioeconomic, psychosocial, health, and food sufficiency information. Multinomial logistic regression produced models predicting adult or child hunger. Predictors of adult hunger included mothers' childhood sexual molestation and current parenting difficulties, or "hassles." Risk factors for child hunger included mothers' childhood sexual molestation, housing subsidies, brief local residence, having more or older children, and substandard housing. This study found that the odds of hunger, although affected by resource constraints in low-income female-headed families, were also worsened by mothers' poor physical and mental health. Eliminating hunger thus may require broader interventions than food programs.

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