Counil Émilie, Gauthier Marie-Josée, Blouin Valérie, Grey Minnie, Angiyou Eli, Kauki Takralik, Dewailly Éric
Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Santé Publique, Département Épidémiologie et Biostatistiques, Paris, France.
Int J Circumpolar Health. 2012 Jul 20;71:18833. doi: 10.3402/ijch.v71i0.18833.
Following our results, based on population studies conducted in Greenland and Northern Canada, that Nunavik Inuit were thrice as highly exposed to dietary trans-fat as were Greenlandic Inuit, and that the biological levels found in Nunavik were already associated with deleterious blood lipid profiles, we decided to engage in translational activities. Our goal was to support Inuit communities in the practical implementation of a reduction of the trans-fat content of food sold in Nunavik. We carried out a preliminary feasibility study in Kuujjuaq and participated in several meetings. This translational phase involved an Inuk leader, an Inuk student, a southern student, a southern nutritionist and a southern researcher in the framework of a public health project. In the present article, we recount the different phases of the process, from research implementation to results dissemination and institutional commitment to implement a primary prevention program of reduction in trans-fat exposure in Nunavik. This is the occasion to draw broader conclusions on the factors that could either act in favour of or, on the contrary, would likely compromise the implementation of primary prevention interventions dealing with food and nutrition in the Arctic. Finally, we share some reflections on future translational activities dealing with trans-fat as well as other junk food issues. The analytical framework we propose integrates a range of factors, from geo-climatic to socio-economic, ethno-cultural, and even political, that we think should be examined while identifying and building preventive recommendations and strategies related to the Northern diet.
基于在格陵兰岛和加拿大北部开展的人口研究结果,即努纳维克因纽特人饮食中反式脂肪的摄入量是格陵兰因纽特人的三倍,且在努纳维克发现的生物水平已与有害的血脂状况相关联,我们决定开展转化研究活动。我们的目标是支持因纽特社区切实减少努纳维克所售食品中的反式脂肪含量。我们在库朱阿克开展了一项初步可行性研究,并参加了几次会议。在一个公共卫生项目的框架内,这个转化阶段涉及一名因纽特领导人、一名因纽特学生、一名南方学生、一名南方营养学家和一名南方研究人员。在本文中,我们讲述了该过程的不同阶段,从研究实施到结果传播,以及机构为在努纳维克实施减少反式脂肪暴露的一级预防项目所做出的承诺。借此机会,我们可以就那些可能有利于或相反可能会阻碍北极地区食品和营养一级预防干预措施实施的因素得出更广泛的结论。最后,我们分享了对未来处理反式脂肪以及其他垃圾食品问题的转化研究活动的一些思考。我们提出的分析框架整合了一系列因素,从地理气候到社会经济、民族文化,甚至政治因素,我们认为在确定和制定与北方饮食相关的预防性建议和策略时应审视这些因素。