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Research Articles

Caregivers’ Reports of the Complex Impacts of the Pandemic on Family Food and Physical Activity Behaviors by Race, Ethnicity, Urbanicity, and Income

Pages 356-363 | Received 10 Mar 2023, Accepted 27 Apr 2023, Published online: 03 Aug 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic affected health and well-being worldwide, but little is known about how the pandemic specifically impacted families with young children. Evidence suggests a relationship between well-being and health behaviors (diet, physical activity) and that preexisting health disparities were exacerbated during the pandemic.

Purpose

This project sought caregiver perspectives on pandemic impacts, overall and by race, ethnicity, urbanicity, and household income.

Methods

Caregivers of 4- to 11-year-olds were randomly selected to complete a mixed-mode survey in the winter of 2021–22 to evaluate ongoing community health education and programming. Qualitative content analysis of open-ended survey responses was conducted. Data were analyzed blind to demographic characteristics; later, differences by population were explored.

Results

Survey analysis (n = 1,429, response rate 27%) identified positive and negative impacts of the pandemic on youth diet and physical activity. Caregivers, unprompted, provided responses about the interconnected impacts on mental and physical health and health behaviors. Pandemic stress was described, including reduced energy, social isolation, and “fear of spread.” Significant differences by key characteristics were found.

Discussion

These findings reflect patterns that could underlie growing disparities.

Translation to Health Education Practice: This work provides context for designing interventions that equitably promote healthy behaviors for young families.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Data availability statement

Data for these analyses will be made available upon request.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by internal funding from HealthPartners.

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