School of Health and Social Development, Faculty of Health, Medicine, Nursing and Behavioural Sciences, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.
Health Place. 2010 Sep;16(5):969-76. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2010.06.001. Epub 2010 Jun 20.
The study explored how African migrant communities living in North-West Melbourne, Australia, conceptualise and interpret the Australian food system from an intergenerational perspective and how this impacts on their attitudes and beliefs about food in Australia. Using a qualitative approach that involved 15 adolescents and 25 parents, the study found significant intergenerational differences in four themes that characterised their new food environment: (1) an abundance of cheap and readily available processed and packaged foods, (2) nutrition messages that are complex to gauge due to poor literacy levels, (3) promotion of a slim body size, which contradicts pre-existing cultural values surrounding body shapes and (4) Australian food perceived as being full of harmful chemicals. In order to develop effective culturally competent obesity prevention interventions in this sub-population, a multigenerational approach is needed.
本研究从代际角度探讨了生活在澳大利亚墨尔本西北地区的非洲移民群体如何理解和诠释澳大利亚的食品体系,以及这如何影响他们对澳大利亚食品的态度和看法。本研究采用定性方法,调查了 15 名青少年和 25 名家长,发现他们对新的食品环境有四个主题的显著代际差异:(1)大量廉价且易于获得的加工和包装食品;(2)营养信息由于文化程度低而难以评估;(3)对苗条身材的推崇,与围绕体型的原有文化价值观相悖;(4)澳大利亚食品被认为充满有害化学物质。为了在这一亚人群中开展有效的、文化适宜的肥胖预防干预措施,需要采取多代际方法。