George Alleyne Chronic Disease Research Centre, University of the West Indies, "Avalon", Jemmott's Lane, Bridgetown BB11115, Barbados.
Nijmegen School of Management, Radboud University, Heyendaalseweg 141, 6525 AJ Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Nutrients. 2020 Jan 31;12(2):384. doi: 10.3390/nu12020384.
Many Small Island Developing States of the Caribbean experience a triple burden of malnutrition with high rates of obesity, undernutrition in children, and iron deficiency anemia in women of reproductive age, driven by an inadequate, unhealthy diet. This study aimed to map the complex dynamic systems driving unhealthy eating and to identify potential points for intervention in three dissimilar countries. Stakeholders from across the food system in Jamaica (n = 16), St. Kitts and Nevis (n = 19), and St. Vincent and the Grenadines (n = 6) engaged with researchers in two group model building (GMB) workshops in 2018. Participants described and mapped the system driving unhealthy eating, identified points of intervention, and created a prioritized list of intervention strategies. Stakeholders were also interviewed before and after the workshops to provide their perspectives on the utility of this approach. Stakeholders described similar underlying systems driving unhealthy eating across the three countries, with a series of dominant feedback loops identified at multiple levels. Participants emphasized the importance of the relative availability and price of unhealthy foods, shifting cultural norms on eating, and aggressive advertising from the food industry as dominant drivers. They saw opportunities for governments to better regulate advertising, disincentivize unhealthy food options, and bolster the local agricultural sector to promote food sovereignty. They also identified the need for better coordinated policy making across multiple sectors at national and regional levels to deliver more integrated approaches to improving nutrition. GMB proved to be an effective tool for engaging a highly diverse group of stakeholders in better collective understanding of a complex problem and potential interventions.
许多加勒比小岛屿发展中国家面临着营养三重负担,肥胖率高、儿童营养不良和育龄妇女缺铁性贫血,这是由饮食不当和不健康导致的。本研究旨在绘制驱动不良饮食的复杂动态系统图,并在三个不同国家确定潜在的干预点。2018 年,牙买加(n = 16)、圣基茨和尼维斯(n = 19)和圣文森特和格林纳丁斯(n = 6)的食品系统利益相关者参加了两次组模型构建(GMB)研讨会,与研究人员合作。参与者描述并绘制了驱动不良饮食的系统,确定了干预点,并创建了干预策略的优先列表。在研讨会之前和之后,还对利益相关者进行了采访,以了解他们对这种方法的看法。利益相关者描述了三个国家中推动不良饮食的类似基本系统,并在多个层面上确定了一系列主导反馈循环。参与者强调了不健康食品的相对可获得性和价格、饮食文化规范的转变以及食品行业的积极广告作为主要驱动因素的重要性。他们认为政府有机会更好地监管广告、抑制不健康的食品选择,并支持当地农业部门以促进粮食主权。他们还认识到需要在国家和区域各级的多个部门更好地协调政策制定,以提供更综合的方法来改善营养。GMB 被证明是一种有效的工具,可以让高度多样化的利益相关者更好地集体理解复杂问题和潜在干预措施。