| Literature DB >> 27928772 |
Naina Patel1, Harriet Batista Ferrer2, Freya Tyrer3, Paula Wray1, Azhar Farooqi4, Melanie J Davies1, Kamlesh Khunti1.
Abstract
Minority ethnic populations experience a disproportionate burden of health inequalities compared with the rest of the population, including an increased risk of type 2 diabetes (T2DM). The purpose of this narrative review was to explore knowledge and attitudes around diabetes, physical activity and diet and identify barriers and facilitators to healthy lifestyle changes in minority ethnic populations in the UK. The narrative review focused on three key research topics in relation to barriers and facilitators to healthy lifestyle changes in minority adult ethnic populations: (i) knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk; (ii) current behaviours and knowledge about physical activity and diet; and (iii) barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle. Nearly all of the studies that we identified reported on South Asian minority ethnic populations; we found very few studies on other minority ethnic populations. Among South Asian communities, there was generally a good understanding of diabetes and its associated risk factors. However, knowledge about the levels of physical activity required to gain health benefits was relatively poor and eating patterns varied. Barriers to healthy lifestyle changes identified included language barriers, prioritising work over physical activity to provide for the family, cultural barriers with regard to serving and eating traditional food, different perceptions of a healthy body weight and fear of racial harassment or abuse when exercising. Additional barriers for South Asian women included expectations to remain in the home, fear for personal safety, lack of same gender venues and concerns over the acceptability of wearing 'western' exercise clothing. Facilitators included concern that weight gain might compromise family/carer responsibilities, desire to be healthy, T2DM diagnosis and exercise classes held in 'safe' environments such as places of worship. Our findings suggest that South Asian communities are less likely to engage in physical activity than White populations and highlight the need for health promotion strategies to engage people in these communities. There is a gap in knowledge with regard to diabetes, physical activity, diet and barriers to healthy lifestyle changes among other ethnic minority populations in the UK; we recommend further research in this area.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes; Ethnic minority populations; Healthy lifestyle changes; Narrative review; South Asian; UK
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27928772 PMCID: PMC5705764 DOI: 10.1007/s40615-016-0316-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Racial Ethn Health Disparities ISSN: 2196-8837
Characteristics of studies in the review of minority ethnic minority populations in the UK
| Study | Theme | Setting | Objectives of study | Design | Participants |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Williams et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | Glasgow, Scotland | To develop a profile of non-biochemical coronary risks for the South Asian population and the general population in Glasgow, with a focus on dietary patterns and potential causes of stress | Questionnaire | Number (% male), not clear (NR). Mean age (range) in years, 35 (30–40). Ethnic categories: South Asian (89% from India subcontinent) and general population |
| Wyke and Landman [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | Glasgow, Edinburgh and Stirling, Scotland | To explore diet and cuisine among family members from a range of South Asian origins | Focus groups and semi-structured interviews | Number (% male), 93 (34%). Mean age (range) in years, NR (NR). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Bangladeshi, Pakistani and Indian) |
| Rai and Finch [ | Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | England | To investigate attitudes towards, and barriers to, physical activity among South Asian and Black communities in England | Focus groups | Number (% male), 175 (50%). Mean age (range) in years, NR (18–50). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi; |
| Bush et al. [ | Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | Glasgow, Scotland | To explore family hospitality and ethnic tradition among South Asian, Italian and general population women | Structured interviews | Number (% male), 259 (all women). Mean age (range) in years, 30 (20–40). Ethnic categories: Italian ( |
| Greenhalgh et al. [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | London, England | To explore the experience of diabetes in British Bangladeshis | Narratives, focus groups, interviews, pile sorting exercises | Number (% male), 50 (NR). Mean age (range) in years, NR. Ethnic categories: South Asian (Bangladeshi; |
| Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | |||||
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Jamal [ | Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | Bradford, England | To explore food consumption experiences of British Pakistanis | Interviews and participant observation | Number (% male), 37 (‘mostly’ male). Mean age (range) in years, NR. Ethnic categories: South Asian (Pakistani) |
| Farooqi et al. [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | Leicester, England | To identify key issues relating to attitudes and knowledge of lifestyle risk factors for coronary heart disease among South Asians aged over 40 years | Focus groups | Number (% male), 44 (55%). Mean age (range) in years, 54 (40+). Ethnic categories: South Asian (all) |
| Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | |||||
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Johnson et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | England | To report on issues relevant to circulatory disorders (including diabetes) in ethnic minority populations. To describe characteristics of people who make up Black and minority ethnic group communities | Second national survey of Black and minority ethnic groups conducted in 1994 | Number (% male), 4452 (weighted sample by age and gender). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian/East African ( |
| Johnson [ | Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | England (survey). England (focus group study). Birmingham (interview study) | To identify barriers to healthy physical activity among Asian communities | Two ‘Health and Lifestyle’ surveys (1992 and 1994), focus group study [ | Number (% male): Survey, not clear; focus groups, 109 (49%); and interviews, 377 (all men). Mean age (range) in years: survey, 16–74; focus groups, 18–50; and interviews, NR. Ethnic categories: Asian (Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Sri Lankan, Arabic and Chinese) |
| Patel et al. [ | Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | Newcastle, England | To compare self-perception of body weight in South Asian and European women | Questionnaire and interviews, anthropometric measures and blood glucose | Number (% male), 770 (all women). Mean age (range) in years, NR (25–74). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi; |
| Carroll et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | Bradford, Leicester, East Lancashire and Birmingham, England | To undertake case studies of ‘exercise on prescription’ schemes where provision is made for South Asian Muslim women | National survey of general practises and leisure centres and in-depth interviews | Number (% male), 35 (all women). Mean age (range) in years, NR (‘varied’). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Pakistani and Bangladeshi). Additional restrictions: all women on ‘exercise on prescription’ schemes |
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Fischbacher et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | UK | Systematic review to assess the evidence that physical activity is lower in South Asian groups than in the general population | Systematic review | Number of studies, 12 in adults; 5 in children. Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi) and general population |
| Anderson et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | Glasgow, Scotland | To identify differences in the evolution of the diets of South Asian and Italian migrants | Structured interviews | Number (% male), 175 (all women). Mean age (range) in years, 30 (30–40). Ethnic categories: South Asian migrants ( |
| Greenhalgh et al. [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | London, England | To explore body image perception in British Bangladeshis with diabetes | Interviews (survey) | Number (% male), 96 (51%). Mean age (range) in years, 52 (NR). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Bangladeshi). Additional restrictions: diabetes only |
| Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | |||||
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Heald et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | Sandwell, England | To determine the effects of total energy intake on the insulin-like growth factor system in two populations with markedly different macronutrient intake and cardiovascular event rate | Food diaries, anthropometric measures, blood tests, physical activity monitors | Number (% male), 536 (48%); |
| Stone et al. [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | Leicester, England | To explore the experience and attitudes of primary care patients with diabetes living in a community with a high proportion of South Asian patients of Indian origin, with particular reference to patient empowerment | Semi-structured interviews | Number (% male), 20 (45%). Mean age (range) in years, 57 (33–80). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian; |
| Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | |||||
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Lawton et al. [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | Edinburgh, Scotland | To explore patients’ perceptions and experiences of undertaking physical activity as part of their diabetes care | Interviews | Number (% male), 32 (47%). Mean age (range) in years, 59 (≥30 years). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Pakistani; |
| Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | |||||
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Sproston and Mindell [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | England | England-wide health survey to monitor trends, estimate prevalence of health conditions and risk factors for specified health conditions. Reporting includes differences between subgroups of the population. | Interviews (survey) | Number (% male), 17,199 (8077 adults, 2003 children). Weighted sample. Ethnic categories: White, South Asian (Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi) and Black African/Caribbean (Chinese) |
| Lawton et al. [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | Edinburgh, Scotland | To explore perceptions and understandings of T2DM causation, focusing on responsibility and blame for developing the disease | In-depth interviews | Number (% male), 53 (47%). Mean age (range) in years, 57 (33–78). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Pakistani ( |
| Netto et al. [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | Edinburgh, Scotland | To consider how service user perspectives can be used to develop effective culturally focused coronary heart disease prevention interventions in Bangladeshi, Indian and Pakistani communities by addressing identified barriers, including deeply held cultural beliefs | Focus groups | Number (% male), 55 (44%; 1st focus group only as majority were interviewed twice). Mean age (range) in years, NR (≥16 years). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian ( |
| Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | |||||
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Sriskantharajah and Kai [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | UK | To explore influences on, and attitudes towards, physical activity among South Asian women with chronic heart disease and diabetes to inform secondary prevention strategies. | Interviews | Number (% male), 15 (all women). Mean age (range) in years, 52 (26–70). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, East African Asian and Sri Lankan). Additional restrictions: all coronary heart disease ( |
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Fleming et al. [ | Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | Northwest England | To explore the influence of culture on T2DM self-management in Gujurati Muslim men | Interview and participant observation | Number (% male), 5 (all men). Mean age (range) in years, NR (52–72). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian/East Africa) |
| Grace et al. [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | London, England | To understand lay beliefs and attitudes, religious teachings and professional perceptions in relation to diabetes prevention in the Bangladeshi community | Focus groups and semi-Structured interviews | Number (% male), 80 (46%; participants also included 20 religious leaders and Islamic scholars and 28 health professionals). Mean age (range) in years, 35 (NR). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Bangladeshi). Additional restrictions: no diabetes |
| Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | |||||
| Khanam and Costarelli [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | London, England | To investigate the attitudes and beliefs held by UK Bangladeshi women on health and exercise and explore possible ways of increasing levels of physical activity in this group | Interview-guided questionnaire | Number (% male), 25 (women only). Mean age (range) in years, 47 (30–60). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Bangladeshi) |
| Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | |||||
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Lawton et al. [ | Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | Edinburgh, Scotland | To explore food and eating practises from the perspectives of Pakistanis and Indians with type 2 diabetes, their perceptions of the barriers and facilitators to dietary change, and the social and cultural factors informing their accounts | Interviews | Number (% male), 32 (47%). Mean age (range) in years, ‘most’ in 50s and 60s (33–71). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian ( |
| Long et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | UK | A systematic review of the literature on participation in sport and recreation by Black and minority ethnic communities. Includes analysis of the ‘Active People’ survey (Tier 3). | Systematic review | Ethnic categories: White (British, Irish and other), Asian (Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, other), Black (African, Caribbean and other), mixed, Chinese and other |
| McEwen et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | London, England | To understand dietary beliefs and eating behaviours of Somalis in the UK | Focus groups and a questionnaire survey | Number (% male), 139 (at least 67%). Mean age (range) in years, NR (NR). Ethnic categories: Somali |
| Scottish Ethnicity and Health Research Survey Working Group [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | Scotland | To review studies on ethnicity and health in Scotland | Review | Ethnic categories: White (Scottish, Irish and other), South Asian (Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi and East African), Black (Caribbean, African), Italian, Chinese and Scottish travellers |
| Yates et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | Leicester, England | To investigate levels of physical activity and their association with health in a White European and South Asian population | Interviews, anthropometric measures | Number (% male), 5474 (48%). Mean age (range) in years, 56 (25–75). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi and other ( |
| Ludwig et al. [ | Knowledge and attitudes about diabetes risk | Greater Manchester, England | To explore health perceptions, diet and the social construction of obesity and how this relates to the initiation and maintenance of a healthier diet in UK Pakistani women | Focus groups and interviews | Number (% male), 55 (women only). Median age (range) in years, 45 (23–80). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Pakistani) |
| Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | |||||
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Williams et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | England | To compare physical activity levels between South Asians and UK White population | Use of interview data from the Health Survey for England (1999–2004) | Number (% male), 14,395 (45%). Mean age (range) in years, 37 (≥16 years). Ethnic categories: South Asian ( |
| Jepson et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | Aberdeen, Glasgow and Edinburgh, Scotland | To explore the motivating and facilitating factors likely to increase physical activity for South Asian adults and their families, in order to develop successful interventions and services | Focus groups and semi-structured interviews | Number (% male), 59 (~40%). Mean age (range) in years, NR (Adults). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian ( |
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Horne et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | UK | To explore the barriers to initiating and maintaining regular physical activity (PA) among UK Indian, Pakistani and White British adults in their 60s | Focus groups and interviews | Number (% male), 127 (31%). Mean age (range) in years, 65 (60–70). Ethnic categories: South Asian (Indian ( |
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle | |||||
| Penn et al. [ | Current behaviours, knowledge and attitudes about physical activity and diet | Middlesbrough, England | To investigate Pakistani female participants’ perspectives of their behaviour change and of salient intervention features | Interviews | Number (% male), 20 (all women). Mean age (range) in years, 34 (26–45). Ethnic categories: |
| Barriers and facilitators to living a healthier lifestyle |
Summary of barriers and facilitators to living a healthy lifestyle
| Barriers | Supporting literature | Facilitators | Supporting literature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social norms and values | |||
| Prioritisation of work over physical activity to provide for the family | Carroll et al. [ | Concern that weight gain might compromise role of family carer/wage earner | Ludwig et al. [ |
| Cultural expectation that women remain at home/do not exercise outside | Carroll et al. [ | Diagnosis of type 2 diabetes | Fleming et al. [ |
| Cultural importance of serving traditional food and expectations of family/social circle | Bush et al. [ | Desire to lose weight/keep healthy | Farooqi et al. [ |
| Need to adhere to cultural expectations of food and eating practises to avoid being alienated | Fleming et al. [ | Obesity associated with being unattractive, unhealthy and low fertility | Greenhalgh et al. [ |
| Different perception of body image, body weight and social acceptability | Grace et al. [ | ||
| Structural factors | |||
| Uncertainty as to the appropriateness of exercise clothing | Grace et al. [ | Education perceived to empower women to resist social pressure and go out to exercise | Grace et al. [ |
| Conflict between music/images in the gym and cultural beliefs | Khanam and Costarelli [ | Incorporation of physical activity classes in places of worship | Jepson et al. [ |
| Language barriers | Carroll et al. [ | ||
| Fear for personal safety | Greenhalgh et al. [ | ||
| Fear of racial harassment and abuse | Greenhalgh et al. [ | ||
| Fear of travelling outside immediate community | Grace et al. [ | ||