Food insufficiency and food insecurity as risk factors for physical disability among Palestinian refugees in Lebanon: Evidence from an observational study

dc.contributor.authorSalti, Nisreen I.
dc.contributor.authorGhattas, Hala
dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of Economics
dc.contributor.departmentCenter for Research on Population and Health (CRPH)
dc.contributor.facultyFaculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS)
dc.contributor.facultyFaculty of Health Sciences (FHS)
dc.contributor.institutionAmerican University of Beirut
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-24T11:23:14Z
dc.date.available2025-01-24T11:23:14Z
dc.date.issued2016
dc.description.abstractBACKGROUND: Potential interactions between malnutrition and disability are increasingly recognized, and both are important global health issues. Causal effects working from nutrition to disability and from disability back to nutrition present an empirical challenge to measuring either of these effects. However, disability affects nutrition whatever the cause of disability, whereas nutrition is likelier to affect disease-related disability than war- or work-related disability. OBJECTIVE: This paper investigates the association of food insufficiency with the risk of physical disability. Data on disability by cause allow us to address the difficulty of reverse causality. METHODS: Multinomial logit regressions of disability by cause on food insufficiency are run using survey data from 2010 on 2575 Palestinian refugee households in Lebanon. Controls include household sociodemographic, health and economic characteristics. Regressions of food insufficiency on disability by cause are also run. RESULTS: Disability has a significant coefficient in regressions of food insufficiency, whatever the cause of disability; but in regressions of disability on food insufficiency, food insufficiency is significant only for disease-related disability (log odds of disease-related disability .78 higher, p = .008). The difference in the results by cause of disability is evidence of a significant association between food insufficiency and disease-related disability, net of any reverse effect from disability to food access. CONCLUSIONS: The association between disease-related disability and food insufficiency is statistically significant suggesting that even taking into account feedback from disability to nutrition, nutrition is an effective level of intervention to avert the poverty-disability trap resulting from the impoverishing effect of disability.
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.dhjo.2016.03.003
dc.identifier.eid2-s2.0-84964588009
dc.identifier.pmid27116917
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10938/25653
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherElsevier Inc.
dc.relation.ispartofDisability and Health Journal
dc.sourceMedline
dc.subjectAdult
dc.subjectArabs
dc.subjectChild
dc.subjectCross-sectional studies
dc.subjectDiet
dc.subjectDisabled persons
dc.subjectFamily characteristics
dc.subjectFood supply
dc.subjectHumans
dc.subjectLebanon
dc.subjectLogistic models
dc.subjectMalnutrition/complications
dc.subjectNutritional status
dc.subjectPoverty
dc.subjectRefugees
dc.subjectRisk factors
dc.subjectSurveys and questionnaires
dc.subjectFood insecurity
dc.subjectFood insufficiency
dc.subjectPhysical disability
dc.titleFood insufficiency and food insecurity as risk factors for physical disability among Palestinian refugees in Lebanon: Evidence from an observational study
dc.typeArticle

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