Systemic Factors Fuel Food Insecurity Among Collegiate Student-Athletes: Qualitative Findings from the Running on Empty Study
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Unique Considerations for FI Risk Among Student-Athletes
1.2. Study Aim
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Materials and Procedures
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Qualitative Data Analysis
2.5. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Understanding of FI Among Professionals Working with Student-Athletes
3.2. FI Screening Protocols Employed with Student-Athletes
3.3. Factors Influencing the Prevalence of FI Among This Population
3.3.1. Theme 1: Individual Contributing Factors
3.3.2. Theme 2: Team/Athletic Department Contributing Factors
3.3.3. Theme 3: University/Societal Contributing Factors
3.4. Calculation of Student-Athlete Stipends
4. Discussion
4.1. Social Determinants of FI Among Collegiate Student-Athletes
4.2. Systems-Level Determinants of FI Among Collegiate Student-Athletes
4.3. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
FI | Food insecurity |
GPA | Grade Point Average |
NCAA | National Collegiate Athletic Association |
NIL | Name, image, likeness |
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Category | No. (%) | |
---|---|---|
SCHOOL PROFILES | ||
Funding Source | Public | 12 (100.0) |
Private | 0 (0.0) | |
Geographic Location 1 | Urban (>60,000) | 8 (66.7) |
Micro Urban (<60,000) | 2 (16.7) | |
Rural (<50,000) | 2 (16.7) | |
Size of Student Body 2 | Medium (<3000–9999) | 2 (16.7) |
Large (≥10,000) | 3 (25.0) | |
X-Large (>15.000) | 7 (58.3) | |
Athletic Department 2022 Revenue 3 | 10–19 M | 6 (50.0) |
20–29 M | 5 (41.7) | |
30–39 M | 1 (8.3) | |
PARTICIPANT DEMOGRAPHICS | ||
Birth Sex | Male | 10 (37.0) |
Female | 17 (63.0) | |
Former Collegiate Athlete | Yes | 11 (40.7) |
No | 16 (59.3) | |
Profession | Athletic Administrator | 3 (11.1) |
Athletic Trainer | 14 (51.9) | |
Sports Performance Coach 4 | 4 (14.8) | |
Sports Dietitian | 6 (22.2) | |
Years in Profession | <1 year | 0 (0.0) |
1–3 years | 5 (18.5) | |
4–6 years | 7 (25.9) | |
7–10 years | 5 (18.5) | |
>10 years | 9 (33.3) | |
No response | 1 (3.7) | |
Years in Current Position | <1 year | 4 (14.8) |
1–3 years | 12 (44.4) | |
4–6 years | 3 (11.1) | |
7–10 years | 4 (14.8) | |
>10 years | 4 (14.8) |
Code | No. (%) * | Sample Quote |
---|---|---|
Subtheme #1: Financial | ||
Limited finances | 17/27 (63.0) | “I think there are people missing meals because they just don’t have money.” (026) |
Cost of living | 6/27 (22.2) | “When they run the numbers…they look at the dining halls, they base scholarship money on those numbers. It doesn’t necessarily translate to the expense of the community where they live…” (023) |
Affordability of healthy food | 3/27 (11.1) | “I would say those international brands are probably going to be pricier products, too. So, they’re using more of their budget.” (009) |
Resource distribution | 3/27 (11.1) | “…a handful of them don’t get stipends or other support.” (012) |
Subtheme #2: Limited Life Skills | ||
How to eat healthy | 15/27 (55.6) | “Another thing is lack of skills and knowledge about what is a healthy food.” (014) |
Shopping and meal prep | 15/27 (55.6) | “They’re very motivated to want to cook healthier and shop healthier. But skills and finances impact how much they can really do and how much time they have to even learn about those things.” (020) |
Money management | 12/27 (44.4) | “I think with skill-building opportunities, we should look at budgeting… one thing we could improve upon… is just talking about what… you should be putting your money towards, looking into how much those things actually cost, and what your budget would need to look like month to month in order to have a successful diet.”(022) |
Time management | 10/27 (37.0) | “While I do agree with the competing priorities side of it, with practices and juggling everything, that’s more time management.” (026) |
Subtheme #3: Competing Priorities | ||
Balancing commitments | 7/27 (25.9) | “... just not having enough time because of having to go to the weight room, practice, class tutoring, and all that stuff. They just didn’t have time to fit in time to eat.” (019) |
Eating is low priority | 7/27 (25.9) | “So, for them, it’s just balancing their schedule about what’s most important, I don’t have time to eat as much as I should or in that time frame.” (006) |
Convenience | 4/27 (14.8) | “What I see most frequently is the selection of convenience foods instead of nutrient-dense foods.” (021) |
Subtheme #4: Cultural (Food Preferences/Familiarity) | ||
Stigma (− sentiment) | 12/27 (44.4%) | “I’ve had multiple times, where athletes approach me and ask me about food and snacks. The athletes rely more on us, the front-line people, rather than administration or their coaches, because there’s just a stigma about it.” (028) |
Stigma(+ sentiment) | 6/27 (22.2%) | “I feel more and more that not just among the student-athletes, but even among the general population of students, there’s less stigma around the food security resources. I feel like students are way more open to it.” (019) |
Socio-economics | 8/27 (29.6) | “I have my group... it could be socioeconomic. Because the foods that they eat at home may not be the healthiest. And that’s just all they’re used to eating.” (009) |
Personal identity | 7/27 (25.9) | “I see American, European, and Asian students are way different with what they choose as a meal. And then also, balance and nutrition are way different…” (014) |
Code | No. (%) * | Sample Quote |
---|---|---|
Subtheme #1: Financial | ||
Budget | 10/27 (37.0) | “I think finances are the biggest problem... as budget cuts come around … food is, unfortunately, the first thing to go as finances are limited.” (027) |
Insufficient stipend | 9/27 (33.3) | “The hardest thing for me is the difference between our headcount or full-ride athletes and those that are on equivalency, all the way to those that are walk-ons… I do think there’s a big difference for students who are getting a stipend every month to pay for their room and board, versus those who are on equivalency and maybe just having their books covered. There’s just a big disparity between the resources they have to buy food.” (023) |
Resource distribution | 8/27 (29.6) | “For us, it’s probably more team by team within athletics… what’s the budget for each team? What can they afford to do?” (007) |
Cost of food | 3/27 (11.1) | “…food is, unfortunately, the first thing to go as finances are limited” (027) |
Subtheme #2: Competing Priorities | ||
Eating is low priority | 10/27 (37.0) | “We’ve really, really, really tried to build up our fueling center… Some coaches have different philosophies about dipping into their sports accounts to help fund their fueling station…” (026). |
Inadequate fueling station funds | 8/27 (22.2) | “I left the [my previous] university… in December of last year, and…they just had a room that was open, and it was like, “This is your fueling station.” But really, it was snacks from Costco. It wasn’t even full of food…” (010) |
Nutrition programs, hiring a dietitian is low priority | 5/27 (18.5) | “We’re missing a Director of Sports Nutrition. It’s a huge piece that we’re missing, having somebody to direct this effort and all these inner workings and for someone to align it all. Hire a dietitian or two. That would be super cool.” (019) |
Subtheme #3: Cultural | ||
Dept. culture (+ sentiment) | 6/17 (22.2) | “…our student-athletes need more accessibility to food and we’re trying to push that... We’ve started stocking areas, especially high traffic areas like our weight room…we are looking for a fueling station…it has been a huge push for us… we’ve identified an area that our student-athletes need and we’re trying to move in the right direction” (008) |
Dept. culture (− sentiment) | 5/27 (18.5) | “The biggest frustration… as an athletic trainer, I did not have the administrative support from a lot of key individuals… I’d say with nutrition, they didn’t see the investment and the payoff for buying more food…” (026) |
Code | No. (%) * | Sample Quote |
---|---|---|
Subtheme #1: Financial | ||
Quality of options | 10/27 (37.0) | “Another one is the quality of our dining hall…They always complain about the quality, and so they don’t choose to eat there when it is a resource on campus.” (006) |
Insufficient stipend | 9/27 (33.3) | “We probably have the most resources available to us with our football team, but we run into the same issues. The cost of living in our town has got ridiculous. I don’t think their stipend checks are enough to cover what they need…the majority is going to rent…they’re trying to stretch the limited funds they have left.” (024) |
Cost of living | 4/27 (14.8) | “The cost of living in our town has gotten ridiculous. I don’t think their stipend checks are enough to cover what they actually need.” (024) |
Subtheme#2: Competing Priorities (Food Environment Reflects Eating is Low Priority) | ||
Availability | 7/27 (25.9) | “…the second thing I noticed is practice times occur when our dining halls are open. We run into a lot of issues on the weekend… dining may not open until 11 or 12 o’clock. You know that day that getting breakfast is a big challenge.” (002) |
Access/proximity | 4/27 (14.8) | “…the international aspect is something that could be added…I feel like food insecurity impacts them in a different way. They have the finances, but they just feel like they don’t have access to the same things here as they do at home.” (012) |
Subtheme#3: Cultural/Societal | ||
Socio-economics | 4/27 (14.8) | “It’s a small community. It’s getting very expensive, and I think some of our other institutions are running into this, too. I don’t know how people live off campus and can afford rental and car insurance and food. I really don’t.” (026) |
Stigma | 4/27 (14.8) | “they’re afraid they’ll be stigmatized if they ask for that type of assistance” (002) |
School culture | 3/27 (11.1) | “Honestly… the athletic department is trying to solve this problem by themselves. The school should do more… if they want to provide better service for student-athletes and other students as well.” (014) |
Social media, advertising | 2/27 (7.4) | “I think spending a lot of money on supplements …they buy these supplements for $100 instead of making a grocery run…they think they are making a decision that is important for their performance, but had they just spent that money on food, they would have seen a better impact.” (005) |
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Gordon, B.; Christensen, N.; Reader, J. Systemic Factors Fuel Food Insecurity Among Collegiate Student-Athletes: Qualitative Findings from the Running on Empty Study. Nutrients 2025, 17, 2254. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17142254
Gordon B, Christensen N, Reader J. Systemic Factors Fuel Food Insecurity Among Collegiate Student-Athletes: Qualitative Findings from the Running on Empty Study. Nutrients. 2025; 17(14):2254. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17142254
Chicago/Turabian StyleGordon, Barbara, Natalie Christensen, and Jenifer Reader. 2025. "Systemic Factors Fuel Food Insecurity Among Collegiate Student-Athletes: Qualitative Findings from the Running on Empty Study" Nutrients 17, no. 14: 2254. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17142254
APA StyleGordon, B., Christensen, N., & Reader, J. (2025). Systemic Factors Fuel Food Insecurity Among Collegiate Student-Athletes: Qualitative Findings from the Running on Empty Study. Nutrients, 17(14), 2254. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17142254