Title of article :
Acculturation and environmental change impacts dietary habits among adult Hmong
Author/Authors :
Lisa Franzen، نويسنده , , Chery Smith، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
11
From page :
173
To page :
183
Abstract :
Focus groups (n = 65) were conducted with Hmong adults in St. Paul/Minneapolis, MN to determine how environmental factors, acculturation, and food insecurity influence dietary behavior, body mass index (BMI), and health. Acculturation was assessed by examining linguistic, social, and eating behavior, length of time in the US, and BMI for B-TL1 (born in Thailand/Laos and in US ≤5 years), B-TL2 (in Thailand/Laos through adolescence, had food memories, and in US >5 years), and B-US (born in US or in Thailand/Laos less than 8 years and no food memories from there). Acculturation was associated with years lived in the US, household size and income, and food assistance usage. Years lived in the US was correlated with food assistance usage, education, household size and income, and perception of diet. B-TL1 and B-TL2 were on average overweight (BMI ≥ 25 < 30), US men were obese (mean BMI = 32.4 ± 7.4), and women were overweight (mean BMI = 29.1 ± 6.8). Themes identified were cultural values impact eating and lifestyle behaviors, food insecurity history influences post-migration behavior, acculturation impacts BMI through diet and exercise, and health status is influenced by changed environments. Environmental changes and increased acculturation have negatively impacted the weight and health of Hmong adults.
Keywords :
Hmong adults , BMI , Dietary patterns , Acculturation , environmental change
Journal title :
Appetite
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Appetite
Record number :
955323
Link To Document :
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