College of Public Health, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Tulsa, OK 74135, USA.
Health Educ Res. 2012 Aug;27(4):645-55. doi: 10.1093/her/cyr089. Epub 2011 Oct 11.
The food insecurity faced by many Native American communities has numerous implications for the health and welfare of families. To identify and address upstream causes of food insecurity in a rural California reservation, we conducted a community assessment using the Tool for Health and Resilience in Vulnerable Environments (THRIVE). Guided by a community-based participatory research orientation, the THRIVE tool was adapted using digital storytelling and implemented in a series of focus groups. As a result of the THRIVE assessment, community members identified racial injustice and physical and financial barriers to accessing healthy and culturally appropriate foods as areas of greatest importance. Subsequently, the project partnership developed policies to reduce identified barriers which included an integrated community supported agriculture and commodity food program, the introduction of Electronic Benefits Transfer and culturally appropriate foods at the local farmers' market and reallocation of shelf space at the grocery store to include vegetables and fruits as well as special foods for diabetics. Results suggest that a participatory research orientation coupled with the use of a culturally adapted THRIVE tool may be an effective means for identifying structural determinants of food insecurity and initiating novel policy interventions to reduce health disparities experienced by Native American communities.
许多美国原住民社区面临粮食不安全问题,这对家庭的健康和福利有诸多影响。为了确定和解决加利福尼亚农村保留地粮食不安全的上游原因,我们使用脆弱环境中的健康和适应力工具(THRIVE)进行了社区评估。在社区参与式研究方法的指导下,我们使用数字故事讲述对 THRIVE 工具进行了改编,并在一系列焦点小组中进行了实施。根据 THRIVE 评估的结果,社区成员确定了种族不公正以及在获取健康和文化适宜食品方面面临的身体和经济障碍是最重要的领域。随后,项目合作伙伴制定了减少已确定障碍的政策,其中包括综合社区支持农业和商品食品计划、引入电子福利转账和在当地农贸市场提供文化适宜食品以及在杂货店重新分配货架空间以纳入蔬菜、水果以及糖尿病患者专用食品。结果表明,参与式研究方法与使用文化适应的 THRIVE 工具相结合,可能是确定粮食不安全的结构性决定因素并采取新的政策干预措施来减少美国原住民社区所经历的健康差距的有效手段。