en |
Nutritional Outcomes Related to Household Food Insecurity among Mothers in Rural Malaysia
Ihab, A.N.; Rohana, A.J.; Manan, W.M. Wan; Suriati, W.N. Wan; Zalilah, M.S. & Rusli, A. Mohamed
Abstract
During the past two decades, the rates of food insecurity and obesity have risen. Although a relationship
between these two seemingly-paradoxical states has not been repeatedly seen in men, research suggests
that a correlation between them exists in women. This study examines nutritional outcomes of household
food insecurity among mothers in rural Malaysia. A cross-sectional survey of low-income households was
conducted, and 223 households with mothers aged 18–55 years, who were non-lactating, non-pregnant,
and had at least one child aged 2–12 years, were purposively selected. A questionnaire was administered
that included the Radimer/Cornell Scale, items about sociodemographic characteristics, and anthropometric
measurements. Of the households, 16.1% were food-secure whereas 83.9% experienced some kind
of food insecurity: 29.6% of households were food-insecure, 19.3% contained individuals who were foodinsecure,
and 35.0% fell into the ‘child hunger’ category. The result reported that household-size, total
monthly income, income per capita, and food expenditure were significant risk factors of household food
insecurity. Although there was a high prevalence of overweight and obese mothers (52%) and 47.1% had
at-risk waist-circumference (≥80 cm), no significant association was found between food insecurity, body
mass index, and waist-circumference. In conclusion, the rates of household food insecurity and overweight
and obesity were high in the study population, although they are looking paradoxical. Longitudinal studies
with larger sample-sizes are recommended to further examine the relationship between food insecurity
and obesity.
Keywords
Household food insecurity; Obesity; Overweight; Malaysia
|