Gichunge Catherine, Somerset Shawn, Harris Neil
School of Health Sciences, Mount Kenya University, P.O. Box 342, Thika 01000, Kenya.
School of Allied Health, Australian Catholic University, P.O. Box 456, Virginia, Brisbane 4001, Australia.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2016 Jan 18;13(1):137. doi: 10.3390/ijerph13010137.
A cross-sectional sequential explanatory mixed methods study was conducted among household food preparers to examine the association between home availability and consumption of traditional vegetables among resettled African refugees living in Queensland, Australia. Home availability of traditional African vegetables was associated with age, having a vegetable garden, employment status, and having a supermarket in the local neighborhood. Food preparers from homes with low vegetable availability were less likely to consume the recommended number of vegetable servings. Barriers faced in the food environment included language, lack of availability of traditional vegetables and lack of transport. All of these aspects contributed to the study findings that both individual and food environment characteristics may play a role in access to and availability of food and vegetable consumption of resettled refugees. Consumption of traditional foods among the resettled refugees continues post resettlement.
对家庭食物制备者开展了一项横断面顺序解释性混合方法研究,以调查居住在澳大利亚昆士兰州的重新安置的非洲难民家中传统蔬菜的可得性与食用之间的关联。非洲传统蔬菜在家中的可得性与年龄、拥有菜园、就业状况以及当地社区有超市有关。家中蔬菜可得性低的食物制备者食用推荐份数蔬菜的可能性较小。食物环境中面临的障碍包括语言、传统蔬菜供应不足和交通不便。所有这些方面都促成了研究结果,即个人和食物环境特征可能在重新安置难民获取食物和蔬菜的机会以及蔬菜消费方面发挥作用。重新安置的难民在重新安置后仍继续食用传统食物。