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1 -74 y) in Santiago (height, weight, and food insecurity).
2 the global negative economic effects of food insecurity.
3 terature on issues related to women and food insecurity.
4 to improving outcomes of children with food insecurity.
5 low-income countries with high rates of food insecurity.
6 gies to reduce yield losses and prevent food insecurity.
7 ualifications, unemployment, job strain, and insecurity.
8 mechanisms underlying the appraisal of food insecurity.
9 Crop yields must increase to address food insecurity.
10 hildren in urban areas experience more civil insecurity.
11 ical to examine climate variability and food insecurity.
12 a (AFA)], breastfeeding, and individual food insecurity.
13 welfare retrenchment, and generalized social insecurity.
14 women </=24 y of age or with household food insecurity.
15 in these regions as a result of conflict and insecurity.
16 fostering resilience during periods of food insecurity.
17 may moderate the influence of income on food insecurity.
18 obesity, as well as undernutrition and food insecurity.
19 e low intakes of critical nutrients and food insecurity.
20 t of climate change, made worse by financial insecurity.
21 ited access to vaccinate children because of insecurity.
22 1.8% of whom experienced some degree of food insecurity.
23 as well as individuals who were high in food insecurity.
24 ing the future had minimal influence on food insecurity.
26 worked 35-40 hours per week and reported job insecurity, a high effort-reward imbalance, and work-to-
27 consistently results in reduced odds of food insecurity across all households regardless of rainfall,
28 socially or personally acceptable ways, food insecurity also contributes to risky sexual practices an
29 ) those for children in households with food insecurity among children compared with children in hous
34 applies only to the association between food insecurity and body weight among adult women, but not to
35 to assess associations between HIV and food insecurity and changes in body composition over time.
36 ere no measurable associations between civil insecurity and child heights in urban areas, even though
39 is most often imposed on conditions of food insecurity and consequent malnutrition, poor sanitation,
41 ed all evidence of associations between food insecurity and dietary quality and contrasted associatio
42 anding of observed associations between food insecurity and dietary quality is needed to test this as
43 In adults, 170 associations between food insecurity and dietary quality were tested, and 50 assoc
45 n those who worked 35-40 hours per week; job insecurity and family-to-work conflict were predictive o
48 cause effective interventions to reduce food insecurity and HIV depend on a rigorous understanding of
50 of the multiple pathways through which food insecurity and HIV/AIDS may be linked at the community,
54 special consideration in discussions of food insecurity and its effect on health, nutrition, and beha
55 ocks as well as contribute to localized food insecurity and lost opportunities for less environmental
56 rates of mortality, exposure to trauma, and insecurity and lower levels of physical health and acces
61 ghts abuses, prevention of IPV, reduction in insecurity and poverty in the post-conflict period, and
64 activities during a period of unprecedented insecurity and violence, including the killing of health
67 owledge the mental health components of food insecurity, and attempt to ensure that women have the sa
68 height, baseline hemoglobin, household food insecurity, and child sex, with parity being the most co
69 e costs and lost productivity caused by food insecurity, and evaluate the relative merits of differen
70 y factors for men were adult smoking and job insecurity, and for women, housing during childhood, adu
75 Job strain, effort-reward imbalance, job insecurity, and work-to-family conflicts are important r
80 The target article explores the role of food insecurity as a contemporary risk factor for human overw
82 e 75 y, and delay discounting predicted food insecurity as well as individuals who were high in food
83 (RUSFs) to patients living with HIV and food insecurity, but in the absence of wasting, it is not kno
88 irly well elucidated, the ways in which food insecurity can lead to HIV are less well understood.
91 n, physical health quality of life, and food insecurity, community-based accompaniment was protective
92 eased prisoners show high levels of "contact insecurity," correlated with social insecurity, in which
93 ata from the Global Drought Monitor and food insecurity data from the Famine Early Warning Systems Ne
94 ew studies investigate the link between food insecurity, dietary diversity and health-related quality
97 tween localized nonviolent and violent civil insecurity during key child nutritional periods and subs
99 preconditioned or triggered by acute stress (insecurity, environmental or economic crises, famine), w
101 modifying future orientation may reduce food insecurity even in the face of diminishing financial res
102 Exposure to 1 nonviolent localized civil insecurity event (mean +/- SD: 0.42 +/- 1.87 events) dur
103 xposure to both violent and nonviolent civil insecurity had negative associations with subsequent HAZ
104 classic approach to addressing chronic food insecurity has been a strategy of agricultural developme
105 anisms through which HIV/AIDS can cause food insecurity have been fairly well elucidated, the ways in
106 o examine the relations among household food insecurity, household food supplies, and school-age chil
107 People living with HIV/AIDS from severe food insecurity households have mean mental health status sco
108 tors of the relation between income and food insecurity in a diverse sample of 975 adults, 31.8% of w
110 variability and change will exacerbate food insecurity in areas currently vulnerable to hunger and u
111 d a significantly greater perception of food insecurity in relation to those with a normal weight (61
112 nce and understanding of the effects of food insecurity in resource-poor settings, including its effe
113 discuss the causes and consequences of food insecurity in the developing world, and the indirect eco
116 "contact insecurity," correlated with social insecurity, in which residential addresses and contact i
118 as childhood gastrointestinal diseases; food insecurity, including reduced crop yields and an increas
119 ed to test associations among household food insecurity; income; maternal personality; household sens
120 fects of poverty include, for instance, food insecurity, infectious disease, and psychological stress
126 ociated with body composition; however, food insecurity is associated with changes in body compositio
130 tress (variable foraging demand [VFD]), food insecurity is imposed on monkey mothers for 16 weeks beg
131 explanation for why individuals report food insecurity is that an individual may have an impaired ep
133 , and behavioral pathways through which food insecurity leads to HIV acquisition and disease progress
137 ld-level financial uncertainty (or "economic insecurity") may be an important fundamental cause of th
138 ry explanatory variable of interest was food insecurity, measured using the culturally adapted and va
140 sm remains unclear, partially because of the insecurity of assays used to detect the donor-derived ma
141 nce the start of the 21st century, but civil insecurity outside the contexts of official wars continu
143 pression and adverse child outcome (eg, food insecurity, perinatal infections, crowded or rural livin
145 PTEs, IPV, continuing adversity (poverty and insecurity), PTSD symptoms (the Harvard Trauma Questionn
147 ocused on prevention of modifiable causes of insecurity, reinvigoration of international norms, suppo
149 negative women had a higher mean +/- SD food-insecurity score (11.3 +/- 5.5 compared with 8.6 +/- 5.5
150 At 6 mo, every 1-unit increase in the food-insecurity score was associated with a 0.13-kg lower bod
151 esis that men experiencing relative resource insecurity should perceive larger breast size as more ph
152 After 3 years, reductions in poverty, food insecurity, stunting, and malaria parasitaemia were repo
153 household goods as an indicator of financial insecurity supported the inference from our main test.
154 consumption, height, and weight), and a Food Insecurity Survey of elderly adults (aged 65-74 y) in Sa
156 hat some patients experience hunger and food insecurity, there are limited data on the prevalence of
158 The goal was to examine the relation of food insecurity to weight status in low-income Latino women.
163 ody composition (all P > 0.05), whereas food insecurity was inversely associated with body weight and
171 he environment because of a general sense of insecurity, whereas liberals are relatively more secure.
173 part of a combined strategy to address food insecurity, which is defined as a lack of sustainable ac
174 ater prevalence of reduced instances of food insecurity, while agricultural inputs are more common fo
175 able logistic regression models, severe food insecurity with hunger was associated with a reduced odd
177 States, per capita income, and parity, food insecurity with hunger, measured by the 10-item adult sc
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