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Undergraduate food insecurity, mental health, and substance use behaviors

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Undergraduate food insecurity, mental health, and substance use behaviors
Abstract
Objective: Recent epidemiological research has found food insecurity to be a growing public health concern among college students. This study investigated food insecurity, mental health, and substance use behaviors among state university undergraduate students. Study Design: Cross-sectional survey. Methods: This was a secondary data analysis of the Student Health Survey. Undergraduate participants ( n = 589) completed the paper-based survey, which had an 84% response rate overall. Results: Approximately 38.5% of students were considered food insecure, 24.8% experiencing low food security, and 13.8% experiencing very low food security. Having a diagnosis of depression, experience of depressive symptoms, and marijuana use in the past 30 days were associated with food insecurity. Conclusion and Implications: Food insecurity is a serious health concern for college students. The results of this study indicate collocating food security and counseling services may enhance existing student resources to better support students facing food and nutrition insecurity, substance use, and depression.
Publication
Nutrition and Health
Date
2022-11-29
Pages
026010602211426
Journal Abbr
Nutr Health
Citation Key
nealUndergraduateFoodInsecurity2022
Accessed
12/15/22, 2:20 PM
ISSN
0260-1060, 2047-945X
Language
en
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Extra
3 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation
Neal, L., & Zigmont, V. A. (2022). Undergraduate food insecurity, mental health, and substance use behaviors. Nutrition and Health, 026010602211426. https://doi.org/10.1177/02601060221142669