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Disaggregating How Asian Americans Define a Healthy Diet: Exploring Generational and Intra-family Differences Through Dyadic Interviews

OBJECTIVES: Asian Americans (AAs) experience a complex and growing non-communicable disease burden linked with dietary behaviors. Dietary norms, which significantly contribute to eating behaviors, face a complex set of Western and Asian socio-ecological influences in AA communities. However, little...

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Autores principales: Cai, Julia, Ali, Shahmir, Mohsin, Farhan, Parikh, Roshan, Yang, Katherine, Auer, Sian, Sanghvi, Ananya, Kamal, Fatema, Merdjanoff, Alexis, Parekh, Niyati, DiClemente, Ralph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9193884/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzac051.016
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author Cai, Julia
Ali, Shahmir
Mohsin, Farhan
Parikh, Roshan
Yang, Katherine
Auer, Sian
Sanghvi, Ananya
Kamal, Fatema
Merdjanoff, Alexis
Parekh, Niyati
DiClemente, Ralph
author_facet Cai, Julia
Ali, Shahmir
Mohsin, Farhan
Parikh, Roshan
Yang, Katherine
Auer, Sian
Sanghvi, Ananya
Kamal, Fatema
Merdjanoff, Alexis
Parekh, Niyati
DiClemente, Ralph
author_sort Cai, Julia
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Asian Americans (AAs) experience a complex and growing non-communicable disease burden linked with dietary behaviors. Dietary norms, which significantly contribute to eating behaviors, face a complex set of Western and Asian socio-ecological influences in AA communities. However, little is known of how dietary norms (such as definitions of a “healthy diet”) are transmitted, intersect, and differ in a multigenerational family environment. METHODS: AA young adults and family members were recruited to participate in dyadic, 60-minute Zoom interviews (Jun - Dec 2021). Young adults and family members were interviewed separately on their respective eating behaviors, including perceived definition of a healthy diet. Recordings were inductively analyzed to identify themes related to different facets of a conceptualized healthy diet. RESULTS: A total of 41 AAs were interviewed (76% female, 61% US-born, age 19–69), including 20 young adults and 21 family members (10 parents, 9 siblings, 2 cousins). Diet healthfulness was defined in three dimensions: types of food, cooking methods, and intersection of diet with holistic wellbeing. Young adults consistently emphasized the role of their parents in shaping their idea of a healthy diet, particularly Asian-specific conceptualizations of balance (e.g., “yeet hay”). However, while these ideas were particularly influential among older participants, younger participants also emphasized the intersection of diet with emotional and spiritual well-being. Both stressed cooking methods as indicators of healthfulness. While a “healthy diet” was conceptualized through intake of food groups such as fruits, vegetables, and proteins, foreign-born and older participants put a larger emphasis on dietary restrictions (e.g., completely cutting out food groups, such as fast food), while US-born and younger participants stressed enjoying foods in moderation. CONCLUSIONS: The differential understanding and impact of AA norms related to diet healthfulness highlights the need for a disaggregated understanding of dietary attitudes and behaviors in health-based interventions for AAs of different generations, particularly family-based programs. Findings call for future mixed-methods research to explore the complex dietary norms identified. FUNDING SOURCES: South Asian Health and Research Group (SAHARA).
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spelling pubmed-91938842022-06-14 Disaggregating How Asian Americans Define a Healthy Diet: Exploring Generational and Intra-family Differences Through Dyadic Interviews Cai, Julia Ali, Shahmir Mohsin, Farhan Parikh, Roshan Yang, Katherine Auer, Sian Sanghvi, Ananya Kamal, Fatema Merdjanoff, Alexis Parekh, Niyati DiClemente, Ralph Curr Dev Nutr Community and Public Health Nutrition OBJECTIVES: Asian Americans (AAs) experience a complex and growing non-communicable disease burden linked with dietary behaviors. Dietary norms, which significantly contribute to eating behaviors, face a complex set of Western and Asian socio-ecological influences in AA communities. However, little is known of how dietary norms (such as definitions of a “healthy diet”) are transmitted, intersect, and differ in a multigenerational family environment. METHODS: AA young adults and family members were recruited to participate in dyadic, 60-minute Zoom interviews (Jun - Dec 2021). Young adults and family members were interviewed separately on their respective eating behaviors, including perceived definition of a healthy diet. Recordings were inductively analyzed to identify themes related to different facets of a conceptualized healthy diet. RESULTS: A total of 41 AAs were interviewed (76% female, 61% US-born, age 19–69), including 20 young adults and 21 family members (10 parents, 9 siblings, 2 cousins). Diet healthfulness was defined in three dimensions: types of food, cooking methods, and intersection of diet with holistic wellbeing. Young adults consistently emphasized the role of their parents in shaping their idea of a healthy diet, particularly Asian-specific conceptualizations of balance (e.g., “yeet hay”). However, while these ideas were particularly influential among older participants, younger participants also emphasized the intersection of diet with emotional and spiritual well-being. Both stressed cooking methods as indicators of healthfulness. While a “healthy diet” was conceptualized through intake of food groups such as fruits, vegetables, and proteins, foreign-born and older participants put a larger emphasis on dietary restrictions (e.g., completely cutting out food groups, such as fast food), while US-born and younger participants stressed enjoying foods in moderation. CONCLUSIONS: The differential understanding and impact of AA norms related to diet healthfulness highlights the need for a disaggregated understanding of dietary attitudes and behaviors in health-based interventions for AAs of different generations, particularly family-based programs. Findings call for future mixed-methods research to explore the complex dietary norms identified. FUNDING SOURCES: South Asian Health and Research Group (SAHARA). Oxford University Press 2022-06-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9193884/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzac051.016 Text en © The Author 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The International Society for Human and Animal Mycology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Community and Public Health Nutrition
Cai, Julia
Ali, Shahmir
Mohsin, Farhan
Parikh, Roshan
Yang, Katherine
Auer, Sian
Sanghvi, Ananya
Kamal, Fatema
Merdjanoff, Alexis
Parekh, Niyati
DiClemente, Ralph
Disaggregating How Asian Americans Define a Healthy Diet: Exploring Generational and Intra-family Differences Through Dyadic Interviews
title Disaggregating How Asian Americans Define a Healthy Diet: Exploring Generational and Intra-family Differences Through Dyadic Interviews
title_full Disaggregating How Asian Americans Define a Healthy Diet: Exploring Generational and Intra-family Differences Through Dyadic Interviews
title_fullStr Disaggregating How Asian Americans Define a Healthy Diet: Exploring Generational and Intra-family Differences Through Dyadic Interviews
title_full_unstemmed Disaggregating How Asian Americans Define a Healthy Diet: Exploring Generational and Intra-family Differences Through Dyadic Interviews
title_short Disaggregating How Asian Americans Define a Healthy Diet: Exploring Generational and Intra-family Differences Through Dyadic Interviews
title_sort disaggregating how asian americans define a healthy diet: exploring generational and intra-family differences through dyadic interviews
topic Community and Public Health Nutrition
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9193884/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzac051.016
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