Department of Population Health, Section for Health Equity, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY.
Department of Nutrition and Food Studies, NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Health, New York, NY.
Ethn Dis. 2024 Apr 10;33(2-3):130-139. doi: 10.18865/ed.33.2-3.130. eCollection 2023 Apr.
Immigration has been identified as an important social determinant of health (SDH), embodying structures and policies that reinforce positions of poverty, stress, and limited social and economic mobility. In the public health literature with regard to diet, immigration is often characterized as an individual-level process (dietary acculturation) and is largely examined in one racial/ethnic subgroup at a time. For this narrative review, we aim to broaden the research discussion by describing SDH common to the immigrant experience and that may serve as barriers to healthy diets.
A narrative review of peer-reviewed quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods studies on cardiometabolic health disparities, diet, and immigration was conducted.
Cardiometabolic disease disparities were frequently described by racial/ethnic subgroups instead of country of origin. While cardiovascular disease and obesity risk differed by country of origin, diabetes prevalence was typically higher for immigrant groups vs United States (US)-born individuals. Common barriers to achieving a healthy diet were food insecurity; lack of familiarity with US food procurement practices, food preparation methods, and dietary guidelines; lack of familiarity and distrust of US food processing and storage methods; alternative priorities for food purchasing (eg, freshness, cultural relevance); logistical obstacles (eg, transportation); stress; and ethnic identity maintenance.
To improve the health of immigrant populations, understanding similarities in cardiometabolic health disparities, diet, and barriers to health across immigrant communities-traversing racial/ethnic subgroups-may serve as a useful framework. This framework can guide research, policy, and public health practices to be more cohesive, generalizable, and meaningfully inclusive.
移民已被确定为健康的一个重要社会决定因素(SDH),体现了强化贫困、压力和有限的社会及经济流动性地位的结构和政策。在公共卫生领域的饮食研究中,移民通常被视为一个个体层面的过程(饮食文化适应),并且通常一次只在一个种族/族裔亚群中进行研究。在本叙事综述中,我们旨在通过描述移民经历中常见的社会决定因素,并将其作为健康饮食的障碍,拓宽研究讨论。
对有关心血管代谢健康差异、饮食和移民的同行评议定量、定性和混合方法研究进行了叙述性综述。
心血管疾病和肥胖风险因原籍国而异,但糖尿病患病率通常在移民群体中高于美国(US)出生的个体。实现健康饮食的常见障碍包括粮食不安全;对美国食品采购做法、食品准备方法和饮食指南不熟悉;对美国食品加工和储存方法不熟悉和不信任;购买食物的替代优先事项(例如,新鲜度、文化相关性);物流障碍(例如,交通);压力;以及民族认同感的维护。
为了改善移民人口的健康状况,了解跨越种族/族裔亚群的移民社区在心血管代谢健康差异、饮食和健康障碍方面的相似之处,可能成为一个有用的框架。该框架可以指导研究、政策和公共卫生实践更加协调、具有普遍性和更有意义地包容。