Over the last several years, scholars have drawn attention to the growing rates of food insecurity among college and university students in the US (Broton & Goldrick-Rab, 2018; The Hope Center for College, Community, and Justice [The Hope Center], 2021). Food insecurity is a multifaceted concept commonly defined as the limited availability of nutritious foods, the uncertain ability to acquire nutritious foods, or the inability to acquire nutritious foods (Anderson, 1990). Food insecurity also constitutes interrupted eating patterns or a reduction in the quality of diet due to the lack of resources to access nutritious food (Coleman-Jensen et al., 2020). An estimated 40% of undergraduate students experience food insecurity (The Hope Center, 2021). Although research on food insecurity in college students is expanding, examinations into whether there are different rates of food insecurity by students’ demographic characteristics have focused primarily on students’ race/ethnicity, age, income or socioeconomic status, and sex or gender (The Hope Center, 2021; Morris et al., 2016; Wood & Harris, 2018). At present, researchers have not focused on food insecurity rates among college students with disabilities. The omission of food insecurity research on college students with disabilities is concerning due to the prevalence of students with disabilities in higher education—nearly one in five undergraduates has a disability (National Center for Education Statistics [NCES], 2021). Due to many forms of oppression, including ableism, racism, classism, and more, students with disabilities encounter more barriers in higher education, leading to reduced degree completion rates (Lett et al., 2020; NCES, 2022). Food insecurity is a factor associated with lower degree completion rates among students and is one of many factors that could exacerbate the existing disparities in degree completion rates (Wolfson et al., 2021). The topic of food insecurity is even more important to examine during the initial semesters of the COVID-19 pandemic when college students experienced significant and sudden financial hardships (Soria et al., 2022; The Hope Center, 2021). Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine whether college students with disabilities had significantly different odds of experiencing food insecurity compared to their peers when controlling for additional demographic variables and COVID-19 experiences.
[1]
Julia A. Wolfson,et al.
The effect of food insecurity during college on graduation and type of degree attained: evidence from a nationally representative longitudinal survey
,
2021,
Public Health Nutrition.
[2]
P. Tugwell,et al.
A framework for identifying and mitigating the equity harms of COVID-19 policy interventions
,
2020,
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology.
[3]
Inger Bergom,et al.
Expanding Our Methodological Toolkit: Effect Coding in Critical Quantitative Studies
,
2020
.
[4]
Bridget Klest,et al.
Impact of ableist microaggressions on university students with self-identified disabilities
,
2019,
Disability & Society.
[5]
J. Wood,et al.
Experiences With “Acute” Food Insecurity Among College Students
,
2018
.
[6]
Sara Goldrick-Rab,et al.
Going Without: An Exploration of Food and Housing Insecurity Among Undergraduates
,
2017
.
[7]
Sylvia Smith,et al.
The Prevalence of Food Security and Insecurity Among Illinois University Students.
,
2016,
Journal of nutrition education and behavior.
[8]
Sophie Chen,et al.
How Big is a Big Odds Ratio? Interpreting the Magnitudes of Odds Ratios in Epidemiological Studies
,
2010,
Commun. Stat. Simul. Comput..
[9]
Thomas D. Snyder,et al.
Digest of Education Statistics
,
1994
.
[10]
S. A. Anderson.
Core indicators of nutritional state for difficult-to-sample populations.
,
1990,
The Journal of nutrition.