| Literature DB >> 27669822 |
Jinan C Banna1, Betsy Gilliland2, Margaret Keefe3, Dongping Zheng2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Understanding views about what constitutes a healthy diet in diverse populations may inform design of culturally tailored behavior change interventions. The objective of this study was to describe perspectives on healthy eating among Chinese and American young adults and identify similarities and differences between these groups.Entities:
Keywords: China; Cross-cultural comparison; Food habits; United States; Young adult
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27669822 PMCID: PMC5037860 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3680-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Example of segmentation and coding from a Chinese participant’s essay
| T-unita | Code |
|---|---|
| First, people should had a balanced diet. | GUIDELINES |
| Some people think vegetable are not so delicious and don’t eat them. | CONSTRAINTS |
| However, it has a lot of nutrition and is very good for our health. | BENEFITS |
| Second, we’d better eat regular meals. | TIMING |
aText has been edited for grammar and spelling to enhance clarity
Chinese students’ (n = 55) descriptions of a healthy diet and exemplifying quotations
| Description of a healthy diet (Number of T-units coded/Number of unique essays with this code) | Explanation of code | Exemplifying quotationsa |
|---|---|---|
| Benefits of healthy eating (83/39) | Writer describes positive outcomes related to healthy eating (psychosocial wellbeing, energy, appearance, detox) | “…Eating harmful foods will cause our body to produce harmful substances, so the health foods is very important for a healthy diet, yet the reasonable diet law is very major, such as if we often eat breakfast, we will find our body become very good, but we drop up eat breakfast, we will feel strange, we will fell pain, because our stomach have a lot of gastric acid. The gastric acid will erode our stomach…” |
| Guidelines (56/31) | Writer refers to or cites the food pyramid or other official guidelines for healthy eating or concepts from those guidelines; this may include balance, variety, or moderation (either naming a concept or providing an example of the concept) | “A healthy diet is not only the healthy food, but also how much you will eat in a meal. If you eat excessively no matter what food it is, you will be in a bad situation.” |
| Food groups (50/24) | Writer names specific foods as representative of a food group or food groups, such as fruit, vegetable, meat, dairy, grain, sweets, oils, or plant source foods | “In my eyes, ‘a healthy diet’ means more vegetables and fruits, less meat and oil.” |
| Timing of eating (49/21) | Writer names specific meals (breakfast, lunch, dinner) or times when foods should or should not be eaten | “According to many scientists, a person needs more energy and nutrition during the day, and less at night. So a healthy diet may be a large-size breakfast, a medium-size lunch, and a modest-size dinner.” |
aQuotations have been edited for grammar and spelling to enhance clarity
American students’ (n = 57) descriptions of a healthy diet and exemplifying quotations
| Description of a healthy diet (Number of T-units coded/Number of unique essays with this code) | Explanation of code | Exemplifying quotationsa |
|---|---|---|
| Guidelines (93/40) | Writer refers to or cites the food pyramid or other official guidelines for healthy eating or concepts from those guidelines; this may include balance, variety, or moderation (either naming a concept or providing an example of the concept) | “A healthy diet to me is one that is balanced. When a girl needs to lose those five extra points they find themselves reading Cosmo magazine looking for a new ‘juice-only’ diet. Although starving oneself might get rid of the weight, it is not healthy nor balanced.” |
| Non-food practices (58/27) | Writer mentions lifestyle, exercise, sleep as part of healthy diet | “In order to have a healthy way of living it is not just what you put into the body it is what is pushed to get out of it as well. That includes toxins which can be minimized by a combination of exercise and flushing the body using liquids.” |
| Food components (40/26) | Writer names macronutrients (carbohydrates, proteins, fats), micronutrients (vitamins, minerals), fiber, or water | “Instead of eating too much sugar or fat we might want to choose foods that are “less sugar” or “reduced fat.” |
| Benefits of healthy eating (33/23) | Writer describes positive outcomes related to healthy eating (psychosocial wellbeing, energy, appearance, detox) | “…Eating only fruits, vegetables, and lean proteins is unrealistic. It is more important to eat that and incorporate those things into everyday eating instead of cutting out ‘bad stuff’ entirely. Becoming obsessive over cutting certain foods out isn’t mentally healthy, so a balanced diet is a healthy diet for both your body and mind.” |
aQuotations have been edited for grammar and spelling to enhance clarity
Number of students who made statements relevant to each category on healthy eating
| Description of a healthy diet | US | % total | Chinese | % total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benefits | 23 | 40.4 | 39 | 70.9 |
| Constraints | 5 | 8.8 | 4 | 7.3 |
| Drawbacks | 8 | 14.0 | 14 | 25.5 |
| Food Components | 26 | 45.6 | 11 | 20.0 |
| Food Groups | 22 | 38.6 | 24 | 43.6 |
| Guidelines | 40 | 70.2 | 31 | 56.4 |
| Non-food practices | 27 | 47.4 | 15 | 27.3 |
| Timing | 7 | 12.3 | 21 | 38.2 |