Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Immigrant Health and Cancer Disparities Service, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, 485 Lexington Ave., 2nd Floor, New York, NY, 10017, USA.
Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA.
J Community Health. 2022 Feb;47(1):28-38. doi: 10.1007/s10900-021-01016-w. Epub 2021 Jul 21.
Hispanics are the largest minority group in the United States, constituting 18 % of the population. Mexicans are the largest Hispanic subgroup and are at disproportionate risk for overweight/obesity. Lifestyle interventions targeting dietary change and physical activity have resulted in significant weight loss in several large randomized clinical trials in the general population, but few studies have tailored interventions to Mexican Americans. We conducted a community needs assessment from 2018 to 2020 in accordance with Domenech-Rodriguez and Wieling's Cultural Adaptation Process (CAP) model to inform the development of SANOS (SAlud y Nutrición para todOS) (Health and Nutrition for All), a culturally-tailored, community-based diet and lifestyle education and counseling program that addresses overweight/obesity among U.S. Mexicans.
Five Spanish-language focus groups were conducted until thematic saturation with 31 overweight/obese Mexicans in New York City about their knowledge, priorities, and preferences regarding diet, exercise, and evidence-based strategies for behavioral change. A grounded theory approach was used to analyze the data.
Five themes were identified: (1) A strong desire for tangible information related to diet and health, (2) Family as a primary motivator for behavior change, (3) Desire for group-based motivation and accountability to sustain intervention participation, (4) Belief in short-term goal setting to prevent loss of motivation, and (5) Time and workplace-related barriers to intervention adoption.
Ecological factors such as the effect of acculturation on diet, family members' role in behavior change, and socioenvironmental barriers to healthy dietary practices and physical activity should be considered when adapting evidence-based treatments for Mexican Americans.
西班牙裔是美国最大的少数族裔群体,占人口的 18%。墨西哥裔是最大的西班牙裔群体,超重/肥胖的风险不成比例。针对饮食改变和身体活动的生活方式干预措施已在普通人群的几项大型随机临床试验中导致显著体重减轻,但很少有研究针对墨西哥裔美国人进行干预措施的调整。我们根据 Domenech-Rodriguez 和 Wieling 的文化适应过程 (CAP) 模型,从 2018 年到 2020 年进行了社区需求评估,以告知 SANOS(SAlud y Nutrición para todOS)(全民健康与营养)的制定,这是一个文化调整的、基于社区的饮食和生活方式教育和咨询计划,旨在解决美国墨西哥人中的超重/肥胖问题。
我们在纽约市对 31 名超重/肥胖的墨西哥人进行了五轮西班牙语焦点小组讨论,直到主题达到饱和,以了解他们对饮食、运动以及行为改变的基于证据的策略的知识、优先事项和偏好。使用扎根理论方法对数据进行分析。
确定了五个主题:(1) 强烈希望获得与饮食和健康相关的具体信息,(2) 家庭是行为改变的主要动力,(3) 希望以群体为基础获得动力和问责制以维持干预参与,(4) 相信短期目标设定可以防止动力丧失,以及 (5) 干预采用的时间和工作场所相关障碍。
在为墨西哥裔美国人调整基于证据的治疗方法时,应考虑生态因素,例如文化适应对饮食的影响、家庭成员在行为改变中的作用以及健康饮食实践和身体活动的社会环境障碍。