grant

Examining Pathways Between Food Insecurity and Cardiometabolic Health in Diverse Children and Adolescents

Organization UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO DENVERLocation Aurora, UNITED STATESPosted 15 Jan 2022Deadline 31 Dec 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY20250-11 years old12-20 years old21+ years oldAddressAdolescenceAdolescentAdolescent YouthAdolescent obesityAdultAdult HumanAeroseb-HCAffectAgeBiological MarkersBody CompositionBody MeasuresBody fatBody measure procedureBuffersCOVID-19COVID-19 pandemic affectedCOVID-19 pandemic consequenceCOVID-19 pandemic effectsCOVID-19 pandemic impactCOVID-19 pandemic impactedCV-19Cardiometabolic DiseaseCardiometabolic DisorderCardiovascular DiseasesCardiovascular PhysiologyCetacortChildChild BehaviorChild HealthChild RearingChild YouthChildhoodChildren (0-21)CommunitiesCoronavirus Infectious Disease 2019Cort-DomeCortefCortenemaCortisolCortisprayCortrilDataDermacortDevelopmentDietary qualityDisparitiesDisparityDysfunctionEcological momentary assessmentEldecortEnvironmentExposure toFamilyFocus GroupsFoodFunctional disorderFutureGeographyHealthHealth CareHealth Care ProvidersHealth PersonnelHealth behaviorHouseholdHydrocortisoneHydrocortoneHytoneIndividualInflammationInformation ServicesInterventionKnowledgeLifeLong-term prospective studiesLow incomeMeasurementMeasuresMediatingMediatorMetabolicMetabolic DiseasesMetabolic DisorderMethodologyMethodsMorbidityMorbidity - disease rateNeighborhoodsNutracortNutritionObesityOxidative StressParentingParenting EducationParenting behaviorParentsPathway interactionsPersonal SatisfactionPhysical activityPhysiologyPhysiopathologyPoliciesPolicy DevelopmentsPriceProctocortProspective StudiesPubertyPublic HealthResearch ResourcesResourcesRiskRisk FactorsRoleSchoolsScienceSecureSeveritiesSleepStagingStressStressful EventStructural RacismSurvey InstrumentSurveysThesaurismosisTimeadiposityadolescence (12-20)adulthoodagesbio-markersbiologic markerbiomarkercardiometaboliccardiometabolic riskcardiometabolismcardiovascular disordercardiovascular functionchild adipositychild obesitychildhood adipositychildhood obesitychildrearingcohortcommunity based organizationscommunity organizationscommunity settingcopingcoronavirus disease 2019coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic consequencecoronavirus disease 2019 pandemic impactcoronavirus disease-19coronavirus infectious disease-19corpulencecytokinedesigndesigningdevelop therapydevelopmentaldiet qualitydietaryeconomic impacteffects following the COVID-19 pandemicethnic diversityethnically diverseexperiencefeedingfood environmentfood insecurityhealth care personnelhealth care workerhealth providerhealth related behaviorhealth workforceimpact of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemicimprovedinnovateinnovationinnovativeintervention developmentjuvenilejuvenile humankidslongitudinal, prospective studymedical personnelmetabolism disordermortalityobese adolescentsobese childrenobesity among adolescentsobesity during adolescenceobesity during childhoodobesity in adolescenceobesity in adolescentsobesity in childrenobesity riskpandemicpandemic diseaseparentpathophysiologypathwaypediatricpediatric obesitypreventpreventingpricingprospectiveprotective factorsracial diversityracially diverserisk for obesityrisk of obesitysocial rolestressful experiencestressful life eventstressful life experiencetherapy developmenttreatment developmenttreatment providerwell-beingwellbeingyoungsteryouth adiposity
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Full Description

ABSTRACT
Food insecurity is known to be associated with metabolic and cardiovascular disease in adults. However, there

is a gap in our knowledge; specifically a lack of studies investigating factors that influence the emergence of

cardiometabolic risks from food insecurity during childhood and adolescence. An improved understanding of

the role of timing and severity of food insecurity on children’s cardiometabolic health (CMH), the

mechanisms/pathways between food insecurity and CMH, and the factors that buffer against or exacerbate this

risk are needed to inform intervention development to prevent later cardiometabolic disease amongst children

who are food insecure. The main objective of this prospective study is to understand how cardiometabolic risk

arises from food insecurity during childhood and identify malleable factors for intervention to buffer the negative

health impact of food insecurity on adolescent’s CMH. We will leverage an established cohort of

racially/ethnically diverse children from low-income households (n=627) participating in a prospective,

longitudinal study examining childhood obesity disparities (HL126171: Berge PI). Survey and ecological

momentary assessment (EMA) data have already been collected, including measures of food insecurity,

household environment (e.g., food environment, family functioning), child health behavior (e.g., diet quality,

sleep, physical activity) and parent behaviors (e.g., feeding practices, stress, coping) at two time points (~24

months apart) at ages 5-10. New measures proposed at ages 11-16 will include: (1) measures of CMH (Life’s

Simple 7 and state-of-the-science measures of body composition, metabolic and cardiovascular function,

oxidative stress and inflammation (i.e., cytokines)), (2) Geographical Information Services (GIS) data, and (3)

focus groups with families, school representatives, community organizations, and healthcare providers to

identify intervention targets and refine policies to reduce harmful health effects of food insecurity. Specifically,

this state-of-the art study will: (1) determine the impact of exposure to household food insecurity (i.e., severity,

timing) on child/adolescent CMH; (2) identify mechanisms/pathways between food insecurity and CMH; (3)

evaluate the extent to which child behaviors, parent factors, and access to resources impact the relationship

between food insecurity and CMH; and (4) using mixed-methodologies (biomarkers, focus groups, EMA, GIS),

prospectively examine the dynamics (e.g., severity, timing) of household food insecurity throughout childhood

and adolescence, and identify risk and protective factors at the level of the family, neighborhood, school, and

community to inform intervention and policy development. This approach is innovative because it represents a

departure from the status quo by focusing on when and how cardiometabolic risk emerges from food insecurity

during childhood and the multi-level factors which buffer against or exacerbate this risk, and significant

because it is expected to have implications for intervention development to prevent future cardiometabolic

diseases among adolescents from food insecure households.

Grant Number: 5R01HL160587-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Jerica Berge

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