Abstract
Background
Diaper insecurity is associated with caregiver health and quality of life through relationships with financial stress, inability to meet other basic health and material needs, constraints on engagement in community, workforce, school, and early childhood education, and negative associations with caregivers’ own and their child’s health and mental health.
Objective
The purpose of this study is to better understand affective components of diaper affordability, how these components may contribute to perceptions of social support, and to understand if and how households would like to receive diaper support.
Design
Cross-sectional observational study.
Methods
Data were collected via an online survey from March-April 2024. Surveys were completed by U.S. adults (N=1,000) who were caregivers of a child in their home wearing diapers.
Results
Half of households (46.7%, n=467) reported diaper insecurity. Caregivers with diaper insecurity were more likely to report feeling alone (OR=8.19, CI=5.78-11.59), judged (OR=6.83, CI=5.07-9.21), helpless (OR=4.62, CI=3.54-6.03), and stressed or anxious (OR=4.54, CI=3.46-5.95) due to diaper affordability compared to those who reported being diaper secure. Most households with diaper insecurity (84.6%, n=395) had accessed resources for help meeting basic needs. Participants with diaper insecurity were less likely to feel treated in the way they deserve by healthcare professionals, community organizations, or the people close to them compared to participants without diaper insecurity. Diaper insecurity and negative affective components of diaper affordability significantly predicted perceived social support F (26, 972)=20.429, p< 0.01), adj. R2=.34. Overall, the majority of all caregivers (68.1%, n=639) reported that receiving help with diapers from a local diaper bank would be “extremely helpful” or “very helpful.”.
Conclusion
More families in the United States may be struggling to afford diapers than are identified with diaper insecurity screening questions. Caregivers identified negative affective components of diaper affordability including feelings of judgement and aloneness which were associated with lower perceptions of social support. Households with and without diaper insecurity indicated that receiving 50 free diapers per month per child from a local diaper bank would be helpful. The support and expansion of diaper banks’ distribution efforts would help families with young children in ways they identified as meaningful.
Plain language summary
Why we did this study
Many families in the United States cannot afford enough diapers for their infants and young children which can be stressful for the adults and can be bad for children’s health.
What we wanted to learn
We wanted to know if families who struggle to afford diapers have similar feelings to each other, what resources they turn to for help, if those resources support them, and if they would like to also receive diapers from those resources.
What we did
In the spring of 2024, 1,000 families in the United States with babies and young children wearing diapers took a survey online. The survey asked questions about whether families could afford diapers, what resources helped them, and if and how they might want help with diapers.
What we learned
Half of the families who took the survey had a hard time affording diapers. Families who could not afford enough diapers felt lonely, stressed, and judged. Most families said that they would like to have help with diapers from a diaper bank. Even families who could afford diapers said that it would be helpful to have help from a diaper bank.
Why is this important
More families have a hard time affording diapers than people realize. Families who struggle to buy diapers feel alone because of it. Many people think of diaper banks as places in the community that can help them. Diaper banks need to have more money so that they can help more families.
Keywords
Introduction
Parenting young children can be simultaneously joyful and stressful. 1 Caregivers with young children not only have many sources of stress, but are more likely to report high levels of stress than adults who are not parents. 2 One specific stressor for caregivers of infants and young children that the United States health programs fail to universally address is the cost of diapers which may be as much as $125 (U.S. dollars) monthly per child.3,4 Families experience diaper insecurity when they cannot afford a diaper supply that allows for regular diaper changes at healthy intervals. 5 Across the United States, 1 in 2 households experience diaper insecurity.6–8 Newly recognized as a social driver of health, diaper insecurity is associated with health outcomes and quality of life through multiple pathways and for multiple generations.9,10 These linkages include financial stress, inability to meet other basic health and material needs, constraints on engagement in community, workforce, school, and early childhood education, negative impacts on children’s physical and developmental health, and negative impacts on caregivers’ mental health.3–14
Support to address diaper insecurity is an important component of facilitating new families’ participation in workplace, caregivers’ continuing their education, early childhood opportunities, and caregiver mental health. 12 Childcare providers typically require that families supply all of the diapers needed by children during the childcare day, even if childcare tuition is free or subsidized. 3 If families cannot furnish the requisite diapers, adults may have to miss work or their own schooling or job training to care for their child at home instead. 3 This has potential repercussions for take-home pay, workforce participation, disruptions to children’s routines and early childhood education, and caregivers’ mental health and well-being. 15
In the United States, federally and state funded safety net programs exist to support some individuals and households in meeting basic needs which they may struggle to afford.
16
These programs include Medicaid health coverage, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program [SNAP] and Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children [WIC] food support, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families [TANF] cash assistance among others.
16
The absence of diapers in federal safety net programs has given rise to a nationwide infrastructure of nonprofit diaper banks via the National Diaper Bank Network.
17
Diaper banks’ diaper distribution is linked to positive impacts on caregiver stress, child health, and the allocation of households’ limited financial resources to food purchases, living and healthcare expenses, and other material basic needs.12,15 When diaper banks distribute diapers via partnerships with other agencies offering resources and supports for families with infants and young children, diaper distribution is associated with families’ increased communication with agency staff, increased engagement in agency programming, and increased connections to address other unmet needs.
18
Although diaper banks’ diaper distribution offers multiple benefits to families, not all communities have a diaper bank.17,19 To better understand families’ experiences with diaper affordability and to identify whether increased access diaper support would be helpful, the present study sought to address the following research questions. 1) What are the affective components of diaper affordability for caregivers of infants and young children? We hypothesized that caregivers experiencing diaper insecurity would be more likely to identify with negative affective statements related to diaper affordability than caregivers who were not experiencing diaper insecurity. 2) Are affective components of diaper affordability associated with perceptions of social support among caregivers of infants and young children? We hypothesized that negative affective components of diaper affordability would be associated with lower perceptions of social support. 3) Would households with young children like to receive support with diapers? We hypothesized that households experiencing diaper insecurity would be more likely to indicate that they would like to receive diaper support than households not experiencing diaper insecurity.
Methods
Data collection
Cross-sectional survey data were collected via an online survey fielded by YouGov from March to April 2024. YouGov, an international technology company, specializes in online research data and analytics. 20 The survey questions were developed by the study authors and their colleagues. Then, the online survey was hosted by YouGov who recruited eligible participants from their web-based panel of adults to complete the survey. YouGov employes multiple monitoring strategies and quality control measures to promote survey data validity. 20
U.S. adults were eligible to complete the survey if they met all of the following criteria: 1) lived with a child under age 4 years who wore any diaper or pull-up at any point throughout the day or night, 2) child under age 4 years was not yet toilet trained, 3) adult was responsible for changing the diapers of the children under age 4 years at least 25% of the time the child was at home, and 4) adult purchased the diapers, diaper wipes, diaper rash cream, etc. or their household at least some of the time. Caregivers were excluded from participation if they completed less than 25% of the diaper changes at home and/or could not read and complete the survey in English.
YouGov created a modeled frame of the U.S. adult population based on multiple sources including the 2020 Cooperative Election Study (CES) surveys, the 2020 Current Population Survey (CPS) Voting and Registration supplements, the 2020 National Election Pool (NEP) exit poll, public records of voter files, and the American Community Survey (ACS) public use microdata. 20 A sampling frame was then built to match the modeled frame such that the survey respondents were nationally representative of the U.S. adult population with regard to the demographic variables of gender, race, age, income relative to family size, and educational attainment. 20 The survey weighting methodology is available online from YouGov. 20 Thus, N=1,000 adult caregivers with shared or primary diaper changing and purchasing responsibilities for a child in their home younger than age four composed the final sample, nationally representative of adults in the U.S. The online survey included questions about caregiver characteristics, utilization of resources, and experiences with healthcare professionals. Demographic data measured included gender, United States region, highest education level attained, racial and ethnic identity, and household income. The authors developed utilization and experience survey items from peer-reviewed literature and subject matter expertise.6,7,21–23 A group of n=22 respondents participated in a pilot of the survey questions. Participants could skip any survey question they did not wish to answer.
Measures
Affective components of diaper affordability
Caregivers were asked for their agreement or disagreement with a series of statements about diaper affordability to determine whether they have struggled, felt alone, judged, helpless, stressed, or anxious related to their experiences with diaper affordability. Responses of “completely agree” or “agree” were combined to create a binary variable for agreement or disagreement with each affective statement.
Diaper insecurity
Caregivers were considered to have experienced diaper insecurity if they reported that they “completely agree” or “agree” with one or more of the following statements about experiences diapering the children under age 4 years in their present household situation: I do not always have enough diapers to change my child's diapers as often as I would like. I find it difficult to afford buying diapers for the child(ren) in my household. I have run out of diapers for the child(ren) in my household because I could not afford enough diapers.
Social support
Perceptions of social support were measured and scored utilizing the 12-item Interpersonal Support Evaluation List [ISEL-12]. 21 The scale measures components of appraisal, belonging, and tangible support. 21 Scale scores range from 0 to 36 with 36 indicating high perceived support. 21 The scale’s Cronbach’s alpha, α=0.82, demonstrates reliability among the scale components. 24
Supportive interactions
Caregivers were asked the frequency (i.e., always, often, sometimes, rarely, or never) to which they were treated in the way that they deserved by healthcare professionals, community organizations, and the people close to them. They were also asked the frequency in which these same groups were positive or encouraging to them. A binary variable was created to assess differences between participants who felt reliably supported or encouraged (always or often) compared to those who did not (sometimes, rarely, or never).
Diaper support
Caregivers were asked for their interest or comfort in diaper support from a variety of sources including: guidance from a nurse or other health professional; assistance from family, friends, diaper banks, or charity; free diapers from a local diaper bank; or the expansion of federal and/or state programs to offer financial assistance for diaper purchases.
Statistical analysis
IBM SPSS version 31.0 was used for statistical calculations. 25 Categorial variables were assessed with descriptive statistics. Group differences between households experiencing diaper insecurity and those who did not experience diaper insecurity were evaluated using Chi-square tests, odds ratios, and an independent samples t-test. Multiple regression analysis assessed the relationship between perceptions of social support, diaper insecurity, and affective components of diaper affordability while controlling for having moved homes in the past year and the sociodemographic characteristics of racial and ethnic identity, household income, marital status, education completed, and employment status.
The majority (77.8%) of respondents were not missing any data to calculate their ISEL-12 scale score, the dependent variable in the multiple regression analysis. For the remaining participants, 13.6% were missing 1 variable, 2.9% were missing 2 variables, 5.7% were missing 3 or more variables. We employed mean substitution to impute missing variables for ISEL-12 scores.
We followed the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) checklist during manuscript preparation. 26
Results
Caregiver characteristics
Caregiver characteristics.
Diaper insecurity experiences
Caregiver agreement with statements about diaper affordability.
Resources accessed for family support
Experiences of diaper insecurity and access of family supports to meet basic needs in the past year.
Social support
The overall average score of perceived social support, on a scale of 0-36 as measured by the ISEL-12 questionnaire, was M=22.0, (SD=7.4). The average total score among households with diaper insecurity (M=19.1, SD=6.9) was significantly lower compared to the average score among households without diaper insecurity (M=24.5, SD=6.8), indicating lower perceptions of social support (t (998) = -12.36, p<.001) among those families with diaper insecurity.
Caregiver feelings about interactions with healthcare professionals, community organizations, and people close to them.
Summary of multiple regression analysis for variables predicting perceived social support (ISEL-12) score among all caregivers (n =973), controlling for demographic variables.
For the overall model, R2 = .36, adjusted R2 = .34. F(26, 972) = 20.43, p < 0.01.
Notes: Higher ISEL scores indicate higher perceived social support.
Reference groups for demographic characteristics were: white race, low-income, married, high school diploma as highest education achieved, and fulltime or parttime employment status.
*p < 0.05. **p < 0.01. ***p < 0.001.
Receiving diapering guidance and other parenting advice from a nurse or other health professional was something that households with (69.0%, n=322) and without diaper insecurity (67.7%, n=361) alike indicated that they “completely agree” or “agree” they would feel comfortable receiving. There were no group differences in comfort receiving diapering guidance from this source. When asked the extent to which they would feel comfortable accepting diaper assistance from family, friends, diaper banks, or charity, more caregivers with diaper insecurity responded that they “completely agree” or “agree” they would feel comfortable accepting (72.4%, n = 338) compared to households without diaper insecurity (50.3%, n = 268), X 2 (1, N = 1,000)=50.896, p <.001. Caregivers reported the extent to which receiving 50 free diapers per month, per child, from a local diaper bank would be helpful for their family. Overall, 68.1% (n=639) of study participants indicated this would be “extremely helpful” or “very helpful.” There was not a difference between households with and without diaper insecurity (69.6%, n=316 with diaper insecurity; 66.5%, n=323 without). Lastly, the majority of households, both with diaper insecurity (74.3%, n=336) and without (60.3%, n=285), specified that expanding federal and/or state programs, TANF, or Medicaid to offer financial assistance for the purchase of diapers would be “extremely helpful” or “very helpful.”
Discussion
Consistent with previous findings, 1 in 2 households with young children in the United States reported diaper insecurity.6–8 This proportion (47%) is higher than in the decade prior to the COVID-19 pandemic (36%) and its increase is a concerning indicator of material hardship.5,11,23 Material hardship, difficulty meeting material basic needs (e.g. food, housing, healthcare) provides a measure of assessing poverty that is more comprehensive than measuring income alone. 27 Increased prevalence of diaper insecurity among U.S. households with young children has implications for increased utilization of the healthcare system to treat diaper related illnesses such as diaper dermatitis. 11 Additionally, diaper insecurity may cause disruptions to the workforce and early child care settings when family members must miss work or childcare if caregivers do not have the diapers required for childcare participation and must stay home to care for a child instead. 3 The unequal burden on these health, economic, and social risks are problematic. All families deserve to be able to raise their children in safe and supportive conditions.
The consequences of diaper insecurity that may be felt most acutely for individual families are impacts to caregiver mental health.5,14 The WHO recognizes mental health “as a state of mental well-bring that enables people to cope with the stresses of life, realize their abilities, learn and work well, and contribute to their community.” 28 Our findings identified diaper affordability as a stressor for families that was associated with perceptions of social support. Gaps in support have implications for mental well-being and coping with the stressors of parenting young children. The majority of caregivers in our study who endorsed diaper insecurity reported feeling stressed, anxious, and/or helpless when they could not afford diapers for their children. Further, caregivers reported feeling judged as a bad parent related to their struggles affording diapers in addition to having lower perceived social support and feelings that other parents did not understand their diaper affordability challenges. Programs addressing mental health for caregivers of infants and young children should explore opportunities to integrate diaper distribution and partnerships with diaper banks as part of the delivery of maternal mental health services, including services designed to support overall mental well-being without diagnosis of a mental health condition. The coverage of diapers through Medicaid, as is being done in Delaware and Tennessee for example, could present unique policy opportunities to co-locate diaper distribution with the delivery of maternal mental health services in community-based and clinical contexts.29,30 Supporting the overall mental well-being of caregivers, instead of intervening only during a period of crisis or in response to a specific diagnosis, is important for addressing the documented stress tied to parenting. 1
The vast majority of households in our study with diaper insecurity reported accessing one or more resources for help meeting their basic needs in the last year. Currently, U.S. policies are structured so that none of the safety net resources available to families with young children support all of a household’s unmet basic needs. Rather, resources exist to supplement specific unmet needs such as healthcare or food. This design means that accessing resources can be time-consuming when families must visit multiple places to address multiple basic needs. Basic needs banks, including diaper banks, aim to provide resources alongside other supports to reduce the amount of time households spend meeting their basic needs. 18
In our study, the prospect of receiving 50 free diapers per month per child from a local diaper bank was helpful for households, both those with and without diaper insecurity. Diapers can be a tool for connecting families to other resources, trust building with healthcare professionals and service providers, and supporting caregivers of young children in a way they have indicated would be meaningful for them. 18 The fact that the majority of households who did not endorse diaper insecurity based on the three screening questions in our study still reported that receiving free diapers would be helpful suggests that not only are diapers a universal need for young children, but many more families in the U.S. may be struggling to meet material basic needs than society realizes. Among households who did not endorse diaper insecurity, half were comfortable accepting diaper bank support and more felt it would be helpful. This highlights that there are many families in need who would find the support helpful who do not feel comfortable accepting assistance. Therefore, offering resources universally and without judgment is important for supporting holistic well-being and health. The potential to ‘lead with resources’ instead of the conventional approach of first screening for adverse health-related social needs would bypass the gaps identified in this study. 31 Universal patient education about resources would eliminate patient concerns of potential negative consequences of disclosure reported in other research. 31
Resources offering assistance with food were the most commonly accessed resources among the households in our sample. It is well documented that families who experience food insecurity are likely to experience diaper insecurity.12,14,32 As such, many diaper banks partner with food banks and WIC clinics to provide diaper assistance alongside food assistance. 18 Including diaper support in state and federal policy programs provides an opportunity to meet families where they are already seeking and receiving assistance. The majority of households in our sample, both those with and without diaper insecurity, indicated that the expansion of these programs to offer diaper assistance would be helpful. It is notable that diaper insecurity is only one component of co-occurring material hardships families may face.4,14 Although addressing diaper insecurity is positively associated with addressing other forms of material hardship, it is important to note that addressing diaper insecurity will not eliminate all forms of material hardship for a family.9,12,15
Hospitals and health clinics were sometimes accessed by families seeking help meeting their basic needs. The majority of study participants reported comfort receiving diapering guidance and other parenting advice from healthcare professionals. Given the frequency of healthcare visits during infancy and early childhood and the importance of postpartum and primary care, healthcare professionals and healthcare settings offer an opportunity to screen for diaper insecurity then offer diaper aid in partnership with local diaper banks.9,33,34 A free diaper insecurity screening module exists in the Epic electronic health records system, but must be activated by the healthcare system to implement. Alongside initiatives to expand screening, institutional and health care team readiness to address patient priorities is critical.
Participants with diaper insecurity were less likely than participants without to feel encouraged or treated in the ways they deserved by healthcare professionals, community organizations, and the people close to them. In any support setting, word of mouth matters—people share with others about the availability of resources and how they were treated. People will not return or encourage others to go if they do not feel respected by staff, institutional policies, or procedures. Ensuring that all families in the U.S. with young children feel respected and supported requires ensuring that all caregivers have access to the material basic needs required to participate in community, the workforce, and in early childhood education settings.
A lack of social support can be isolating, so too can diaper insecurity. Among caregivers in our study, negative affective experiences related to diaper affordability were associated with lower perceptions of social support. Diaper support may bolster perceived social support by providing diapers which can then facilitate community and workforce participation and the social and community interactions that come with such engagements. In our study, regular contact with other parents of young children was a significant predictor of higher perceived social support scores. Having enough diapers to allow for diaper changes while away from home is important for the ability to socialize with other families and thus experience the benefits of social support. In the United States and across the world, many caretaking responsibilities fall to women, through both physical acts of child rearing and the invisible mental load of managing a household with young children. 35 Diaper support for households with young children is one component of addressing women’s overall health and mental well-being.
Limitations
The present study uniquely documents the intersection of diaper insecurity and affective components of material hardship. Data were collected via a cross-sectional survey. From the survey we learned how people felt in that moment, their experiences with resources, supports, and healthcare in the last 12 months, and what they thought would be helpful. We did not calculate a power analysis for sample size before the start of the study. Although participants are a nationally representative sample, those without reliable internet access and people who prefer a language other than English could not participate. In our sample, 44% of households with young children reported incomes <200% of the federal poverty guideline. Another source using U.S. census data reported the percentage of U.S. households with children under age 18 with income <200% of the federal poverty guideline to be 37% in the same year our sample was collected. 36 To date, no screening question has been validated for diaper insecurity. Additionally, future studies are needed to test the impact of diaper distribution interventions on caregiver loneliness, social connectedness, and mental health to determine the extent to which they are helpful and why.
Conclusion
Many more families in the United States may be struggling to afford diapers than are identified with diaper insecurity screening questions. Caregivers identified negative affective components of diaper affordability including feelings of judgement and aloneness which were associated with lower perceptions of social support. Universally, households with and without diaper insecurity indicated that receiving 50 free diapers per month per child from a local diaper bank would be helpful. The support and expansion of diaper banks’ distribution efforts to serve more households would help families in ways they have identified as acceptable and meaningful.
Supplemental material
Supplemental material - Caregiver report of the experiences of infant and child diaper insecurity, social support, and utilization of resources to help meet basic family need in the United States: A nationally-representative cross-sectional survey
Supplemental material for Caregiver report of the experiences of infant and child diaper insecurity, social support, and utilization of resources to help meet basic family need in the United States: A nationally-representative cross-sectional survey by Kelley E. C. Massengale, Megan V. Smith and Kristin P. Tully in Women's Health.
Footnotes
Acknowledgments
We appreciate the survey participants for their time and sharing their experiences.
Ethical considerations
The study was approved following review by the Duke University Campus Institutional Review Board [IRB], Protocol #2024-0478.
Consent to participate
Each participant provided written informed consent, captured electronically, before completing the online survey.
Author contributions
Massengale, Kelley E. C. Formal analysis, Project administration, Writing – original draft. Smith, Megan V: Project administration, Writing – review & editing. Tully, Kristin P. (Corresponding Author): Formal analysis, Writing – original draft.
Funding
The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Funding provided by The Seedlings Foundation.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Dr. Kristin Tully is an inventor of a patented medical device. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill intellectual property is licensed. The device is not referenced or otherwise related to the content of this manuscript. Dr. Kelley Massengale and Dr. Megan Smith have received diaper-related research funding from the Seedlings Foundation, serve on the federal Diaper Distribution Demonstration and Research Pilot (DDDRP) Evaluation Advisory Committee and are employed by the National Diaper Bank Network, an organization that receives funding from the diaper manufacturer, Huggies and engages in advocacy related to addressing poverty experienced by families and diaper insecurity. They declare no other competing interests.
Data Availability Statement
The raw data are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Supplemental material
Supplemental material for this article is available online.
References
Supplementary Material
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