Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-qsmjn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-17T17:17:49.383Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Food insecurity prevalence among college students at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2009

M Pia Chaparro*
Affiliation:
Department of Community Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of California Los Angeles, PO Box 951772, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1772, USA
Sahar S Zaghloul
Affiliation:
Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research, Biotechnology Department, Safat, Kuwait Department of Human Nutrition, Food and Animal Sciences, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI, USA
Peter Holck
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI, USA
Joannie Dobbs
Affiliation:
Department of Human Nutrition, Food and Animal Sciences, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI, USA
*
*Corresponding author: Email mchaparro@ucla.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objectives

To assess the prevalence and identify possible predictors of food insecurity among college students at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa.

Design

Cross-sectional survey, including the US Department of Agriculture’s Household Food Security Survey Module, demographic and spending variables.

Setting

University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawai’i (USA).

Subjects

Four hundred and forty-one non-freshmen students from thirty-one randomly selected classes.

Results

Twenty-one per cent of students surveyed were food-insecure, while 24 % were at risk of food insecurity. Students at higher risk of food insecurity included those who reported living on campus and those living off-campus with room mates. Those identifying themselves as Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, Filipinos and mixed were also at increased risk of food insecurity.

Conclusions

Food insecurity is a significant problem among college students at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. Food availability and accessibility should be increased for these students through the establishment of on-campus food banks and student gardens. Future studies should assess the prevalence of food insecurity in other college campuses nationwide.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2009

Food insecurity ‘exists when there is limited or uncertain availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods or limited or uncertain ability to acquire acceptable foods in socially acceptable ways’(1). Food insecurity, under this definition, is a condition resulting from financial resource constraints, including geographical differences in the cost of food and housing(Reference Bickel, Nord, Price, Hamilton and Cook2). There are other factors that can also impact food insecurity status; for example, a lack of skills in managing money and food (e.g. preparing budgets, managing bills, stretching groceries at the end of the month)(Reference Anderson and Swanson3).

In 2006, 12·6 million US households (10·9 % of all households surveyed) were found to be food-insecure(Reference Nord, Andrews and Carlson4). In Hawai’i, the prevalence of food insecurity was substantially lower, with 7·8 % of all Hawai’i households estimated to be food insecure in 2004–6(Reference Nord, Andrews and Carlson4). Similar to national findings(Reference Nord, Andrews and Carlson4), data collected in Hawai’i indicate that a higher prevalence of food insecurity occurred in households with children and in households with lower income relative to the poverty line(Reference Baker, Derrickson, Derrickson, Reyes-Salvail, Onaka, Horiuchi, Yu and Dannemiller5). Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders were at highest risk of food insecurity, followed by Filipinos(Reference Baker, Derrickson, Derrickson, Reyes-Salvail, Onaka, Horiuchi, Yu and Dannemiller5). The islands of Molokai, Lanai and Maui had the highest levels of food insecurity, while Oahu had the lowest. However, all islands had high levels of food insecurity in certain geographical areas(Reference Baker, Derrickson, Derrickson, Reyes-Salvail, Onaka, Horiuchi, Yu and Dannemiller5).

Results from multiple studies indicate that food insecurity may have a negative impact on academic outcomes among children of various age groups(Reference Murphy, Wehler, Pagano, Little, Kleinman and Jellinek6Reference Jyoti, Frongillo and Jones10). Food insecurity, hunger or food insufficiency were associated with behavioural and attention problems(Reference Murphy, Wehler, Pagano, Little, Kleinman and Jellinek6), absenteeism and tardiness(Reference Murphy, Wehler, Pagano, Little, Kleinman and Jellinek6), psychosocial dysfunction(Reference Murphy, Wehler, Pagano, Little, Kleinman and Jellinek6, Reference Kleinman, Murphy, Little, Pagano, Wehler, Regal and Jellinek7), low maths(Reference Alaimo, Olson and Frongillo8, Reference Winicki and Jemison9) and reading scores(Reference Jyoti, Frongillo and Jones10), grade repetition(Reference Alaimo, Olson and Frongillo8) and being suspended from school(Reference Alaimo, Olson and Frongillo8) in several different samples of children and adolescents across the USA. Studies analysing the association between food insecurity and poor academic performance, to our knowledge, have never been conducted among college students. In fact, there is very limited information on the extent, determinants or consequences of food insecurity in college populations. Given the potential correlation between reduced scholastic achievement and food insecurity, it is important to investigate how prevalent food insecurity is among college students. It is also important to determine which students, if any, are at increased risk of suffering from food insecurity.

To our knowledge, only two unpublished undergraduate research projects have measured the prevalence of food insecurity in a university campus setting. These two studies were conducted at Ohio University (D Holben, personal communication, 11 October 2005) and at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa (UHM; SS Zaghloul, unpublished results). The study carried out in Hawai’i was done as a pilot study conducted among students taking an introductory nutrition course and found that 22 % of the students surveyed were food-insecure, while 14·5 % were at risk of food insecurity (SS Zaghloul, unpublished results). The prevalence of food insecurity among these students was thus twice as high as the US average for the year 2006 (10·9 %) and almost three times higher than the average for Hawai’i for the years 2004–6 (7·8 %)(Reference Nord, Andrews and Carlson4). While the sample size of that study was small and not representative of the entire student body, the results suggested possible elevated food insecurity among UHM students and served as motivation for the present research.

The objectives of the present study were: (i) to assess the prevalence of food insecurity among students at UHM; and (ii) to identify possible predictors of food insecurity among this population.

Methods

The study was approved by the University of Hawai’i Committee on Human Subjects. Data were collected from students at UHM during October and November 2006 using a survey designed to measure food insecurity and its potential predictors and consequences in this population. Only prevalence, demographic characteristics and spending patterns of the food-insecure UHM students are included herein. Because the food security questions inquired about food security status during the previous year, freshmen were excluded from the study to ensure that results reflected college life experience.

Courses were randomly selected from a list of all courses offered during autumn 2006. This list was stratified by four course levels with typical enrolment by sophomores, juniors, seniors and graduate students. Classes were chosen randomly within each stratum, oversampling graduate courses to offset the smaller average size of graduate classes. We emailed instructors of the ninety-five randomly selected courses requesting 15 min of one class period to distribute the informed consent form and the questionnaire. Thirty-one (33 %) of the ninety-five instructors queried agreed to participate in the study. Forty-four (46 %) of contacted instructors did not reply after two contact attempts and therefore their classes were dropped from the study. Twenty instructors (21 %) declined to participate in the study, with 75 % of these instructors indicating limited class time as the reason. From the thirty-one participating classes, 441 of 445 students present agreed to complete the survey.

Exclusion criteria included being a freshman (n 3) or an unclassified student (n 5), being on a special diet because of illness (n 8), being pregnant (n 1) and not completing the food security core questions (n 14). Thus, a total of thirty-one participants were excluded, resulting in a sample of 410 valid surveys.

Survey instrument

The survey included questions on food security, demographics and spending patterns. To assess clarity and applicability of questions to college-age students, a small pilot test was conducted using a convenience sample of nine UHM students from different majors and academic years. Students were asked to fill out the questionnaire independently and then as a group to openly discuss all of the questions. Each question was assessed for readability and relevance to the college population. The session was audio-taped to ensure that the comments of the students were captured correctly. Suggestions and clarifications were included in the final questionnaire.

Food security

The US Adult Food Security Survey Module (AFSSM), which is a subset of the US Household Food Security Survey Module (HFSSM), was used to measure food security status(11). The AFSSM consists of ten questions; each question addressed conditions and behaviours that may have occurred in the previous 12 months and that attempt to characterize households with difficulty meeting basic food needs. The questions specify lack of money or other resources to obtain food as a reason; therefore, voluntary fasting and/or dieting to lose weight were excluded from the measure(Reference Bickel, Nord, Price, Hamilton and Cook2). AFSSM results were summarized by summing positive responses and collapsing the results into four food security categories (high food security, marginal food security, low food security, very low food security), as shown in Table 1(Reference Nord12). The HFSSM, from which the AFSSM is derived, has been found to be valid and reliable for Asians and Pacific Islanders living in Hawai’i(Reference Derrickson13).

Table 1 Food security categories based on the number of affirmative responses to the US Adult Food Security Survey Module

Adapted from NordReference Nord(12).

Social determinants

Demographic data obtained included age, gender, marital status, number of children, ethnicity, major, academic year (i.e. sophomore, junior, etc.), living arrangement, participation in a campus meal plan, place of birth, length of residency in Hawai’i and food programme participation.

Students’ spending patterns

Students were asked to report approximate expenditures in each of several categories during an average month. These categories included housing, transportation, food (groceries and eating out), entertainment, cell phone and shopping for other items (e.g. clothes, shoes, household items). Respondents selected amounts from supplied ranges. Additionally, respondents were asked to indicate any large expense (tuition, schoolbooks, travel, etc.) in the past year, and how much money they have available to spend each month.

Statistical analyses

Descriptive statistics were used to summarize the prevalence of food insecurity and the characteristics of the sample. Differences between food-secure and food-insecure individuals were analysed using χ 2 tests, t tests and linear-by-linear association analyses, with significance specified as P < 0·05. Because small sample sizes rendered asymptotic assumptions questionable when data were analysed using the four food security category outcome, we dichotomized the dependent variable into food security (high food security + marginal food security) and food insecurity (low food security + very low food security). The SPSS® statistical software package version 15·0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) was used for all data analyses.

Multivariate logistic regression models were used to examine the effect of different variables on food insecurity, while adjusting for gender, marital status and having children. Variables indicated to be significant in univariate analysis were included in the multivariate model and include living arrangement, ethnicity, years of residency in Hawai’i, and expenditures on transportation, eating out, entertainment and shopping. We also included place of birth, as it was associated with the four-level outcome of food insecurity in a univariate model.

Results

The prevalence of food insecurity among UHM students surveyed was 21 % (n 85), with 15 % (n 61) having low food security and 6 % (n 24) very low food security. Approximately one in four students (24 %; n 98) reported having one or two indicators of food insecurity, classifying them as marginally food-secure or at risk of food insecurity.

Table 2 shows the demographic characteristics of the sample by food security status. Living arrangement and ethnicity were significantly different between food-secure and food-insecure groups. Years of residency in Hawai’i was also significantly different between food-secure and food-insecure students (food-secure, mean 14·8 (sd 10·9) years; food-insecure, mean 10·8 (sd 10·5) years; t = 3·04, P = 0·003, data not shown). The average age for both food-secure and food-insecure students was 26 years (food secure, sd = 7 years; food-insecure, sd = 6 years).

Table 2 Distribution of demographic characteristics by food security statusFootnote *: college students at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, October/November 2006

WIC, Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children.

* Total number of valid surveys = 410. Numbers may vary because of missing data.

P < 0·05 is statistically significant.

Data not analysed due to small sample size in each cell.

The distribution of the students’ monthly spending patterns is shown in Table 3. Money spent on housing, groceries, cell phone and one-time large expense did not differ significantly between the food-secure and food-insecure. However, the probability of food insecurity increased significantly as expenditures on transportation, eating out, entertainment and shopping increased.

Table 3 Distribution of monthly spending patterns ($US) by food security status: college students at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, October/November 2006

*Linear-by-linear association test, P < 0·05 is statistically significant.

†One-time large expense in the past year (e.g. tuition, school books, travel, etc.).

Results from the multivariate model suggest that students who lived on campus, who lived off-campus but did not specify their living arrangement (off-campus unknown) or who lived off-campus with room mates were more likely to be food-insecure than were students living with their parents or relatives (OR = 2·98, 4·96 and 5·01, respectively; Table 4). Ethnic differences were also observed. Japanese have been previously reported as the most food-secure in Hawai’i(Reference Baker, Derrickson, Derrickson, Reyes-Salvail, Onaka, Horiuchi, Yu and Dannemiller5). When compared with Japanese, Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, Filipinos, and students reporting two or more ethnicities had significantly higher odds of being food-insecure (Table 4). Additionally, years lived in Hawai’i was a significant predictor of food insecurity: an additional year of residency reported was estimated to decrease the odds of food insecurity by 5·8 % (OR = 0·942; Table 4).

Table 4 Multivariate logistic model predicting the likelihood of being food-insecure by demographic factors and spending patternsFootnote *: college students at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, October/November 2006

* Total sample = 313.

Adjusted for gender, marital status and having children.

P < 0·05 is statistically significant.

§ Set to zero because this parameter is redundant (reference category).

Discussion

Forty-five per cent of UHM students surveyed were either food-insecure or at risk of being food insecure. The prevalence of food insecurity among UHM students (21 %) was nearly three times that reported by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) for the state of Hawai’i for the years 2004–6 (7·8 %)(Reference Nord, Andrews and Carlson4). Food insecurity on campus was also slightly higher than the prevalence found among Hawaiian residents reported by the Hawai’i Health Survey (HHS) of 1999–2000 (16·5 %)(Reference Baker, Derrickson, Derrickson, Reyes-Salvail, Onaka, Horiuchi, Yu and Dannemiller5). The USDA study used the HFSSM to measure food insecurity(Reference Nord, Andrews and Carlson4) and the present study used a subscale of such survey, the AFSSM. The HHS, however, used a six-question food security questionnaire (previously validated against the HFSSM) and thus a different coding system(Reference Baker, Derrickson, Derrickson, Reyes-Salvail, Onaka, Horiuchi, Yu and Dannemiller5), suggesting it is more appropriate to compare our findings with the USDA results. Our prevalence estimates are similar to results of the pilot study conducted previously at UHM during spring 2005 (SS Zaghloul, unpublished results); the prevalence of food insecurity is almost the same in both studies (21–22 %). However, the prevalence of marginally food-secure students found in the current study was somewhat higher than that found in the pilot study (21 % v. 14·5 %).

In the present study, students living on campus, off-campus with unknown arrangement and off-campus with room mates were significantly more likely to be food-insecure than were students living with their parents or relatives. Because we are unaware of any other published study examining food security in a college campus setting, comparison of these results with others in similar settings is difficult. Noting that high housing costs have previously been associated with food insecurity(Reference Capps, Ku, Fix, Furgiuele, Passel, Ramchand, McNiven and Perez-Lopez14) and that Honolulu was recently ranked the third most expensive city in the nation(15), it is likely that students living with their parents, relatives and spouses spend substantially less on housing than students in other living arrangements and hence are less likely to be food-insecure.

There was disparity in food insecurity between Japanese and other ethnic groups. Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, Filipinos, and students with multiple ethnicities were more likely to be food-insecure than Japanese students, after controlling for gender, having children and marital status. Similar findings were found in the HHS(Reference Baker, Derrickson, Derrickson, Reyes-Salvail, Onaka, Horiuchi, Yu and Dannemiller5), as well as in another local survey(Reference Derrickson13). Additionally, the Hawai’i Food Bank reports that the largest ethnic group it serves (33 %) is Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islanders(16). Among students surveyed in the present study, being Hawaiian or Pacific Islander was the most significant predictor of food insecurity, with Hawaiian and Pacific Islander students estimated to have almost thirteen times greater odds of being food-insecure compared with Japanese students. These results mirror state poverty rates where 16 % of all Native Hawaiians lived below the poverty line in 1999 compared with only 6 % of Japanese(Reference Kana’iaupuni, Malone and Ishibashi17).

Number of years in Hawai’i was negatively associated with food insecurity in the multivariate analysis. A previous study also found that time lived in the USA was significantly and negatively associated with food insecurity among West African refugees(Reference Hadley, Zodhiates and Sellen18).

While we anticipated money management skills might affect food insecurity among this student population, significant differences in expenditures measured were not observed between food-secure and food-insecure groups in the multivariate analysis. Lack of an association may be due to limitations in the scope of our survey questions on this topic in an effort to keep the survey instrument brief. Similarly, differences may have been obscured because we did not attempt to collect information on credit card use or assess students’ debt. Studies have shown that it is common for college students to utilize credit cards and to have significant debt(Reference Norvilitis, Szablicki and Wilson19Reference Levesque Ware21); it is plausible that food-insecure students in our sample may be incurring debt to assist in supporting themselves through college.

Very few students in our sample participated in food assistance programmes, quite likely because most college students are not eligible for programmes such as food stamps(22). Students may therefore suffer from food insecurity with little opportunity for public assistance.

Because of the diverse population composition of Hawai’i students and because of high living expenses in Hawai’i, the results of the present study should not be generalized to other college students in the USA. However, our results suggest that food insecurity may exist on other college campuses, although likely with different prevalence and possibly with different explanatory factors.

Limitations

While virtually all students in participating classes completed the survey, only 33 % of invited instructors permitted the survey to be distributed in their classes, a potential source of selection bias. We suggest any such bias may be minor, as our sample still included classes from virtually all colleges at UHM. Classes within each class-level stratum were not selected proportional to class size, and thus students only in large classes were possibly less likely to be included. However, our sample did include numerous students from both large and small classes, and furthermore we suggest it unlikely an association exists between food insecurity and the size of class an individual attends.

Income is a known contributing factor to food insecurity, yet we were unable to collect specific relevant income information and thus it is difficult to determine the contribution of income variation on food insecurity among UHM students. Assessing income in this population is difficult given the variety of support students are likely to receive from relatives, such as living with their parents or other relatives, or housing paid for or augmented by parents. In recognition of this variation, we instead assessed students’ spending patterns, which while somewhat less difficult is still an imperfect measure of purchasing power. In addition, credit card use/debt and levels of other debt were not determined.

Conclusions

Food insecurity is a significant problem for one in every five students surveyed at UHM. A need exists to increase food availability and accessibility on campus through establishing on-campus food banks and student gardens. Future studies need to investigate the impact of food insecurity on college students’ academic performance and the strategies these students use to cope with their food insecurity. Additionally, an investigation of the prevalence of food insecurity on other college campuses would enable assessment of food insecurity across a variety of college student demographics. Identification of food insecurity and its determinants among college students across the nation can enable policy makers to both assess the magnitude of the problem and to formulate effective strategies to reduce its prevalence.

Acknowledgements

The study was funded by the Department of Human Nutrition, Food and Animal Sciences at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. The authors have no conflict of interest to report. All authors participated in the design of the study; M.P.C., S.S.Z. and J.D. participated in the development of the survey and informed consent; M.P.C., S.S.Z. and P.H participated in all data analysis; and M.P.C. participated in the data collection and management. We would like to thank the instructors and students who participated in the study.

References

1.Anon. (1990) Core indicators of nutritional state for difficult-to-sample populations. J Nutr 120, Suppl. 11, 1559S1600S.Google Scholar
2.Bickel, G, Nord, M, Price, C, Hamilton, W & Cook, J (2000) Guide to Measuring Household Food Security, Revised 2000. Washington, DC: USDA, Food and Nutrition Service.Google Scholar
3.Anderson, K & Swanson, J (2002) Rural Families – Welfare Reform & Food Stamps. Policy Brief. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University.Google Scholar
4.Nord, M, Andrews, M & Carlson, S (2007) Household Food Security in the United States, 2006. Washington, DC: USDA, Economic Research Service.Google Scholar
5.Baker, KK, Derrickson, JP, Derrickson, SAK, Reyes-Salvail, F, Onaka, AT, Horiuchi, B, Yu, MQ & Dannemiller, J (2001) Hunger and Food Insecurity in Hawaii, Baseline Estimates. Hawaii Health Survey, 1999–2000. Honolulu, HI: Hawaii Department of Health, Office of Health Status Monitoring.Google Scholar
6.Murphy, JM, Wehler, CA, Pagano, ME, Little, M, Kleinman, RE & Jellinek, MS (1998) Relationship between hunger and psychosocial functioning in low-income American children. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 37, 163170.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
7.Kleinman, RE, Murphy, JM, Little, M, Pagano, M, Wehler, CA, Regal, K & Jellinek, MS (1998) Hunger in children in the United States: potential behavioral and emotional correlates. Pediatrics 101, E3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
8.Alaimo, K, Olson, CM & Frongillo, EA Jr (2001) Food insufficiency and American school-aged children’s cognitive, academic, and psychosocial development. Pediatrics 108, 4453.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9.Winicki, J & Jemison, K (2003) Food insecurity and hunger in the kindergarten classroom: its effects on learning and growth. Contemp Econ Policy 21, 145157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
10.Jyoti, DF, Frongillo, EA Jr & Jones, SJ (2005) Food insecurity affects school children’s academic performance, weight gain, and social skills. J Nutr 135, 28312839.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
11.US Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service (2008) US Adult Food Security Survey Module: Three-Stage Design, With Screeners. http://www.ers.usda.gov/briefing/foodsecurity/surveytools/ad2008.pdf (accessed April 2009).Google Scholar
12.Nord, M (2006) Briefing Rooms. Food Security in the United States: Hunger and Food Security. http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FoodSecurity/labels.htm (accessed December 2006).Google Scholar
13.Derrickson, JP (1999) Independent validation of the core food security module with Asians and Pacific Islanders. PhD Thesis, Colorado State University.Google Scholar
14.Capps, R, Ku, L, Fix, ME, Furgiuele, C, Passel, JS, Ramchand, R, McNiven, S & Perez-Lopez, D (2002) How Are Immigrants Faring after Welfare Reform? Preliminary Evidence from Los Angeles and New York City. Final Report to the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation US Department of Health and Human Services. Washington, DC: The Urban Institute.Google Scholar
15.The Council for Community and Economic Research (2006) ACCRA Cost of Living Index. http://www.coli.org/pdf/MediaReleaseQ306.pdf (accessed May 2007).Google Scholar
16.The Hawaii Foodbank (2006) Overview: Hunger in America 2006 – Hawaii Foodbank Report. Honolulu http://www.hawaiifoodbank.org/default.asp?doctype=sm&C_ID=247 (accessed May 2007).Google Scholar
17.Kana’iaupuni, SM, Malone, N & Ishibashi, K (2005) Income and Poverty Among Native Hawaiians. Summary of Ka Huaka’i Findings. Honolulu, HI: Kamehameha Schools – PASE.Google Scholar
18.Hadley, C, Zodhiates, A & Sellen, DW (2007) Acculturation, economics and food insecurity among refugees resettled in the USA: a case study of West African refugees. Public Health Nutr 10, 405412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19.Norvilitis, JM, Szablicki, PB & Wilson, SD (2003) Factors influencing levels of credit-card debt in college students. J Appl Soc Psychol 33, 935947.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
20.Norvilitis, JM, Merwin, MM, Osberg, TM, Roehling, PV, Young, P & Kamas, MM (2006) Personality factors, money attitudes, financial knowledge, and credit-card debt in college students. J Appl Soc Psychol 36, 13951413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
21.Levesque Ware, C (2002) Consumerism, credit cards and college students. PhD Thesis, Salve Regina University.Google Scholar
22.US Department of Agriculture (2008) Food Stamps Program, Applicants and Recipients. http://www.fns.usda.gov/fsp/applicant_recipients/students.htm (accessed February 2008).Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Food security categories based on the number of affirmative responses to the US Adult Food Security Survey Module

Figure 1

Table 2 Distribution of demographic characteristics by food security status*: college students at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, October/November 2006

Figure 2

Table 3 Distribution of monthly spending patterns ($US) by food security status: college students at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, October/November 2006

Figure 3

Table 4 Multivariate logistic model predicting the likelihood of being food-insecure by demographic factors and spending patterns*: college students at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, October/November 2006