Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington School of Public Health, Hans Rosling Center for Population Health, 3980 15th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98195, USA and Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, 1730 Minor Ave, Seattle, WA 98101, USA.
Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Health Sciences Building, Box 356420, 1959 NE Pacific Street, Seattle, WA 98195-6420, USA.
Health Educ Res. 2023 Jan 20;38(1):13-27. doi: 10.1093/her/cyac033.
American Indian (AI) communities experience persistent diabetes-related disparities, yet few nutrition interventions are designed for AI with type 2 diabetes or address socio-contextual barriers to healthy eating. We describe our process of adapting the evidence-based Cooking Matters® program for use by AI adults with type 2 diabetes in a rural and resource-limited setting in the North-Central United States. We conducted three focus groups with AI adults with diabetes to (i) identify Cooking Matters® adaptations and (ii) gather feedback on appropriateness of the adapted intervention using Barrera and Castro's cultural adaptation framework. Transcripts were coded using an inductive, constant comparison approach. Queries of codes were reviewed to identify themes. Contextual considerations included limited access to grocery stores and transportation barriers, reliance on government food assistance and the intergenerational burden of diabetes. Adaptations to content and delivery included incorporating traditional and locally available foods; appealing to children or others in multigenerational households and prioritizing visual over written content. Our use of Barrera and Castro's framework adds rigor and structure to the cultural adaptation process and increases the likelihood of future intervention success. Other researchers may benefit from using this framework to guide the adaptation of evidence-based interventions in AI communities.
美国印第安人(AI)社区持续存在与糖尿病相关的差异,但很少有营养干预措施是专为 2 型糖尿病的 AI 设计的,也很少有措施能够解决健康饮食的社会文化障碍。我们描述了在北美的农村和资源有限的环境中,为 2 型糖尿病的 AI 成年人使用基于证据的 Cooking Matters®计划的适应过程。我们对 3 名患有糖尿病的 AI 成年人进行了焦点小组讨论,以(i)确定 Cooking Matters®的改编内容,以及(ii)使用 Barrera 和 Castro 的文化适应框架收集对改编干预措施的适当性的反馈。使用归纳式、恒定比较方法对转录本进行编码。审查对代码的查询以确定主题。背景考虑因素包括杂货店和交通障碍的有限获取,对政府食品援助的依赖,以及糖尿病的代际负担。内容和交付方面的改编包括纳入传统和当地可获得的食物;吸引多代同堂家庭中的儿童或其他成员,并优先考虑视觉内容而不是书面内容。我们使用 Barrera 和 Castro 的框架为文化适应过程增加了严谨性和结构,并增加了未来干预成功的可能性。其他研究人员可能会受益于使用此框架来指导在 AI 社区中对基于证据的干预措施的改编。