Stang Jamie, Kong Angela, Story Mary, Eisenberg Marla E, Neumark-Sztainer Dianne
Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55454-1015, USA.
J Am Diet Assoc. 2007 Jun;107(6):936-41. doi: 10.1016/j.jada.2007.03.003.
Little is known about the food and weight-related behaviors of Hmong adolescents. This study assessed these behaviors in Hmong adolescents and determined if they differed between Hmong and white teens or by country of birth.
School-based cross-sectional study.
SUBJECTS/SETTING: Hmong (n=649) and white (n=2,260) adolescents from 31 public middle and high schools in the Minneapolis/St Paul, MN, metropolitan area who participated in Project EAT (Eating Among Teens).
Family meals, grocery shopping, and meal preparation; consumption of breakfast, snacks, and fast foods, physical activity and inactivity; body satisfaction, weight concern, body mass index, and weight-control behaviors.
Variables were compared across race/ethnicity and by country of birth using chi(2) tests and general linear model regression.
Hmong students reported greater participation in family meals and more involvement with food purchasing and preparation. Fast-food consumption was similar among groups. Hmong teens reported less frequent breakfast consumption. The prevalence of overweight was higher in Hmong male adolescents than white male adolescents, but similar among female adolescents. Hmong students reported higher levels of weight concern, body dissatisfaction, dieting, unhealthful weight-control behaviors, less physical activity, and more inactivity than white students. Hmong male adolescents participated in extreme unhealthful weight-control behaviors four times more often than white male adolescents.
Hmong adolescents appear to be at increased risk for obesity, body dissatisfaction, and unhealthful weight-control behaviors compared to white adolescents. There is a need for culturally tailored interventions to address these nutrition and weight issues among Hmong adolescents.
对于苗族青少年与食物及体重相关的行为了解甚少。本研究评估了苗族青少年的这些行为,并确定它们在苗族青少年和白人青少年之间或根据出生国家是否存在差异。
基于学校的横断面研究。
研究对象/地点:来自明尼阿波利斯/圣保罗市(明尼苏达州)大都市区31所公立初中和高中的苗族(n = 649)和白人(n = 2260)青少年,他们参与了“青少年饮食”项目(EAT)。
家庭用餐、杂货店购物和膳食准备;早餐、零食和快餐的消费情况,身体活动和不活动情况;身体满意度、体重担忧、体重指数和体重控制行为。
使用卡方检验和一般线性模型回归对不同种族/民族以及根据出生国家的变量进行比较。
苗族学生报告称更多地参与家庭用餐,并且更多地参与食物采购和准备。各群体之间的快餐消费情况相似。苗族青少年报告称早餐消费频率较低。苗族男性青少年中超重的患病率高于白人男性青少年,但女性青少年中相似。苗族学生报告称比白人学生有更高水平的体重担忧、身体不满意、节食、不健康的体重控制行为、较少的身体活动和更多的不活动情况。苗族男性青少年参与极端不健康体重控制行为的频率是白人男性青少年的四倍。
与白人青少年相比,苗族青少年似乎肥胖、身体不满意和不健康体重控制行为的风险增加。需要进行文化上量身定制的干预措施来解决苗族青少年中的这些营养和体重问题。