Hamdi Nick, Balestracci Kate, Tovar Alison, Corcoran Celeste, Watts Delma-Jean, Tobar Fatima, Samson Margaret, Amin Sarah
College of Health and Wellness, Johnson & Wales University, Providence, RI, USA.
Department of Nutrition, College of Health Sciences, University of Rhode Island, Providence, RI, USA.
Am J Health Promot. 2025 Mar;39(3):503-513. doi: 10.1177/08901171241301886. Epub 2024 Nov 19.
To understand pediatricians', community partners', and food insecure parent/caregivers' perspectives on addressing food access and nutrition education in clinical settings, and to conduct a formative evaluation of a clinical-community food access and nutrition education intervention.
A mixed-methods evaluation.
Data was collected from pediatricians and parents/caregivers recruited from one urban pediatric primary care clinic, and from community partners involved in food access.
Pediatricians (n = 14), parents at risk of food insecurity (n = 7), and community partner staff (n = 8) participated in qualitative interviews.
A cross-sectional survey among pediatricians assessing demographics, nutrition training, and knowledge of food access programs was administered. Semi-structured virtual interviews were conducted to understand experiences with food insecurity and food access programs, and to identify content and delivery preferences for a clinical-community intervention. Descriptive statistics were used to characterize the pediatrician and parent demographics and pediatrician nutrition knowledge. A hybrid deductive-inductive thematic analysis was used to identify emerging themes from qualitative interviews.
Few pediatricians (n = 3, 11%) reported receiving previous nutrition training, and knowledge-based food access program questions revealed significant gaps in pediatricians' understanding of program eligibility. Thematic analyses underscore challenges in addressing food insecurity in the clinical setting, gaps in clinical-community partnerships, and barriers to participating in food access programs.
Findings provide recommendations for the development of clinical-community food access and nutrition education interventions.
了解儿科医生、社区合作伙伴以及粮食不安全的家长/照顾者对于在临床环境中解决食物获取和营养教育问题的看法,并对一项临床-社区食物获取和营养教育干预措施进行形成性评估。
混合方法评估。
数据收集自一家城市儿科初级保健诊所招募的儿科医生和家长/照顾者,以及参与食物获取工作的社区合作伙伴。
14名儿科医生、7名有粮食不安全风险的家长以及8名社区合作伙伴工作人员参与了定性访谈。
对儿科医生进行了一项横断面调查,评估人口统计学特征、营养培训以及对食物获取项目的了解情况。开展了半结构化虚拟访谈,以了解粮食不安全和食物获取项目的经历,并确定临床-社区干预措施的内容和实施偏好。使用描述性统计来描述儿科医生和家长的人口统计学特征以及儿科医生的营养知识。采用混合的演绎-归纳主题分析法,从定性访谈中识别新出现的主题。
很少有儿科医生(3名,11%)报告接受过以前的营养培训,基于知识的食物获取项目问题显示出儿科医生对项目资格的理解存在重大差距。主题分析强调了在临床环境中解决粮食不安全问题的挑战、临床-社区伙伴关系的差距以及参与食物获取项目的障碍。
研究结果为临床-社区食物获取和营养教育干预措施的制定提供了建议。