학술논문

Exhaustion Of Food Budgets At Month’s End And Hospital Admissions For Hypoglycemia
Document Type
article
Source
Health Affairs. 33(1)
Subject
Public Health
Health Sciences
Clinical Research
Diabetes
Nutrition
Behavioral and Social Science
Prevention
Generic health relevance
Zero Hunger
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Aged
80 and over
Budgets
California
Food Deprivation
Food Supply
Health Surveys
Humans
Hypoglycemia
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Admission
Periodicity
Poverty
Risk Factors
Social Welfare
Young Adult
Determinants Of Health
Disparities
Public Health and Health Services
Applied Economics
Health Policy & Services
Health services and systems
Policy and administration
Language
Abstract
One in seven US households cannot reliably afford food. Food budgets are more frequently exhausted at the end of a month than at other points in time. We postulated that this monthly pattern influenced health outcomes, such as risk for hypoglycemia among people with diabetes. Using administrative data on inpatient admissions in California for 2000-08, we found that admissions for hypoglycemia were more common in the low-income than the high-income population (270 versus 200 admissions per 100,000). Risk for hypoglycemia admission increased 27 percent in the last week of the month compared to the first week in the low-income population, but we observed no similar temporal variation in the high-income population. These findings suggest that exhaustion of food budgets might be an important driver of health inequities. Policy solutions to improve stable access to nutrition in low-income populations and raise awareness of the health risks of food insecurity might be warranted.