Food insecurity, social networks and symptoms of depression among men and women in rural Uganda: a cross-sectional, population-based study
Date
2017-10-09Author
Perkins, Jessica M
Nyakato, Viola N
Kakuhikire, Bernard
Tsai, Alexander C
Subramanian, SV
Bangsberg, David R
Christakis, Nicholas A
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
To assess the association between food insecurity and depression
symptom severity stratified by sex, and test for evidence of effect modification by
social network characteristics. A population-based cross-sectional study. The nine-item Household Food
Insecurity Access Scale captured food insecurity. Five name generator questions
elicited network ties. A sixteen-item version of the Hopkins Symptom Checklist for
Depression captured depression symptom severity. Linear regression was used to
estimate the association between food insecurity and depression symptom
severity while adjusting for potential confounders and to test for potential
network moderators.In-home survey interviews in south-western Uganda.
Subjects: All adult residents across eight rural villages; 96% response rate (n 1669).
Severe food insecurity was associated with greater depression symptom
severity (b=0·4, 95% CI 0·3, 0·5, P <0·001 for women; b=0·3, 95% CI 0·2, 0·4,
P<0·001 for men). There was no evidence of effect modification by social
network factors for women. However, for men who are highly embedded within
in their village social network, and (separately) for men who have few poor
contacts in their personal network, the relationship between severe food
insecurity and depression symptoms was stronger than for men on the periphery
of their village social network, and for men with many poor personal network
contacts, respectively. In this population-based study from rural Uganda, food insecurity
was associated with mental health for both men and women. Future research is
needed on networks and food insecurity-related shame in relation to depression
symptoms among food-insecure men
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