Kaufman Leslie, Karpati Adam
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Brooklyn, NY, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2007 Jun;64(11):2177-88. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2007.02.019. Epub 2007 Mar 23.
Despite prevention efforts, childhood obesity has reached epidemic proportions in the United States. This ethnographic study seeks to enhance understandings of the sociocultural dimensions of childhood obesity and inform prevention efforts. Using participant observation, interviews, and life histories, this research probes the sociocultural roots of childhood obesity by exploring the food practices and everyday lives of Latino families in Bushwick, Brooklyn, a low-income neighborhood in New York City. Mired in persistent poverty, Latino families burdened by teetering resources provide for their children using coping strategies in which everyday food practices play an important part. These practices illuminate cultural ideas about good parenting, well-being, and conceptions of the body. We argue that these practices, embedded in the neighborhood food environment, drive food choice and related activities of families, often leading to overweight and obesity in their children. They form the sociocultural roots of childhood obesity, and their implications are critically important for how public health professionals approach the relationship of food, nutrition, and obesity.
尽管采取了预防措施,但儿童肥胖在美国已达到流行程度。这项人种学研究旨在增进对儿童肥胖社会文化层面的理解,并为预防工作提供信息。通过参与观察、访谈和生活史研究,本研究通过探索纽约市低收入社区布鲁克林布什wick的拉丁裔家庭的饮食行为和日常生活,探究儿童肥胖的社会文化根源。深陷持续贫困之中,资源匮乏的拉丁裔家庭采用一些应对策略来抚养孩子,日常饮食行为在这些策略中起着重要作用。这些行为体现了关于良好育儿、幸福和身体观念的文化理念。我们认为,这些行为植根于社区食物环境,驱动着家庭的食物选择及相关活动,常常导致孩子超重和肥胖。它们构成了儿童肥胖的社会文化根源,其影响对于公共卫生专业人员如何看待食物、营养和肥胖之间的关系至关重要。