| Literature DB >> 17875272 |
Groesbeck P Parham1, Isabel C Scarinci.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Low-income African Americans who live in rural areas of the Deep South are particularly vulnerable to diseases associated with unhealthy energy imbalance. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has suggested various physical activity strategies to achieve healthy energy balance. Our objective was to conduct formal, open-ended discussions with low-income African Americans in the Mississippi Delta to determine 1) their dietary habits and physical activity levels, 2) their attitudes toward CDC's suggested physical activity strategies, and 3) their suggestions on how to achieve CDC's strategies within their own environment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17875272 PMCID: PMC2112870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Summary of Results, Discussion Among Lay Health Workers (n = 18) on Overeating and Barriers to Healthy Eating Among Low-Income African Americans in the Mississippi Delta, 2005
| Topic | Sample Comments |
|---|---|
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| Low self-esteem | [People who overeat] don't have interest in themselves. |
| A way of coping with depression or loneliness | It is like . . . if your husband or man doesn't come home or leaves you, you go eating. And that is the only way you can go to sleep. You get full. |
| Compensation for what they did not have during childhood | I just feel like a person gets into a mode: "I did not have it when I was a kid, and now I can get whatever I want. I got the money. I am going to go and buy whatever I wanna. |
| Social or family gatherings as a tradition | It's getting together and the food be so good, and you hate to put it down. |
| Easy accessibility to buffets | I used to go to the buffet and just because I paid seven dollars I tried to eat twelve dollars worth of food. |
| Food stamps | [People who overeat] buy all of this food and they just eat, eat, eat. |
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| Food price | Eating healthy is very expensive. |
| Family structure and lack of behavioral rules on eating within household | Most families do not sit at the table anymore. |
| Lack of parenting skills | Children do not raise you. You raise the children. But now we got the children raising the parents. |
| Lack of assistance from health care providers | Because I can compare my doctor here with the doctors I go to in Jackson and Memphis. They aren't concerned about your weight as the other doctors. I think doctors are not doing their part in trying to help us. |
Summary of Results, Discussion Among Phase 1 Focus Group Participants (n = 36) on Perceptions of Health and Factors Associated With Eating Habits and Physical Activity Among Low-Income African Americans in the Mississippi Delta, 2005
| Topic and Response | Sample Comments |
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| Good diet | Good health means good eating habits and staying away from junk foods. |
| Stress-free living | Healthy living means having a body that can endure stress, work, family and other activities as well as being able to laugh and not take things seriously. |
| Independent living | Being able to work and take care of oneself. |
| Having a positive self-image | Feeling good about oneself. |
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| Walking, walking after eating, and sit-ups before going to bed | — |
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| Diabetes, hypertension, stroke, heart attack, cancer, and obesity among children | — |
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| High-volume meals | I load up. I fill my plate up and I eat all that I put on it. |
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| Influence of family on what is cooked and how it was prepared | I know how to cook healthy, but my family won't let me cook healthy. |
| Cost of food | A lot of people in the Delta are not as monetarily stable as they would like to be. |
| Lack of knowledge | I don't know how to prepare a nutritious meal. |
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| Two most common answers were | — |
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| Being in motion | Making it to the store. |
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| Generally well understood | It builds the muscles in your heart. |
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| Almost no one reported exercising every day | — |
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| Varied | Looking nice. |
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| Varied from inadequate to adequate | — |
Dashes (—) indicate that sample comments do not apply.
Summary of Results, Discussion Among Phase 2 Focus Group Participants (n = 53) on Potential Strategies to Promote Physical Activity Among Low-Income African Americans in the Mississippi Delta, 2005
| Topic | Sample Comment |
|---|---|
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| Comprehensive approaches better than isolated strategies | Should cover both nutrition and physical activity, and provide specific information [e.g., recipes, exercises]. |
| Strategies for the whole community | These activities must be guided and supervised, with built-in social support from the community. |
| Personalized programs for individual needs (considering age, sex, and health problems) but implemented in groups, including families | It would be good to have a personal trainer for the family and have some family physical activity program. |
| Programs implemented at church settings | Churches would be a good venue — messages from the pulpit, group walks, competitions across churches. |
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| Group activities involving family members | Make it a group activity; include children and whole families. |
| No need for personalized programs | People may be resistant to constructive criticism from a personal trainer. |
| Income as a major barrier to physical activity | Cost is an issue. |