| Literature DB >> 34616551 |
Margrethe F Horlyck-Romanovsky1, Terry T-K Huang2, Ramatu Ahmed3, Sandra E Echeverria4, Katarzyna Wyka5, May May Leung6, Anne E Sumner7, Melissa Fuster8.
Abstract
Dietary acculturation may explain the increasing risk of diet-related diseases among African immigrants in the United States (US). We interviewed twenty-five Ghanaian immigrants (Youth n 13, Age (Mean ± sd) 20 y ± 5⋅4, Parents (n 6) and Grandparents (n 6) age 58⋅7 ± 9⋅7) living in New York City (NYC) to (a) understand how cultural practices and the acculturation experience influence dietary patterns of Ghanaian immigrants and (b) identify intergenerational differences in dietary acculturation among Ghanaian youth, parents and grandparents. Dietary acculturation began in Ghana, continued in NYC and was perceived as a positive process. At the interpersonal level, parents encouraged youth to embrace school lunch and foods outside the home. In contrast, parents preferred home-cooked Ghanaian meals, yet busy schedules limited time for cooking and shared meals. At the community level, greater purchasing power in NYC led to increased calories, and youth welcomed individual choice as schools and fast food exposed them to new foods. Global forces facilitated nutrition transition in Ghana as fast and packaged foods became omnipresent in urban settings. Adults sought to maintain cultural foodways while facilitating dietary acculturation for youth. Both traditional and global diets evolved as youth and adults adopted new food and healthy social norms in the US.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes risk; Dietary acculturation; Generational differences; Ghanaian immigrants; Nutrition transition
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34616551 PMCID: PMC8477345 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2021.69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Socio-demographic characteristics: Ghanaian youth, parents and grandparents
| Total | Youth | Parents and Grandparents | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population ( | 25 | 52 % (13) | 48 % (12) |
| Mean Age (years ± | 38 ± 21⋅2 | 20 ± 5⋅4 | 58⋅7 ± 9⋅7 |
| Sex | |||
| Female | 75 % (19) | 62 % (8) | 92 % |
| Education | |||
| High School or less | 68 % (17) | 62 % (8) | 75 % (9) |
| Some college or more | 24 % (6) | 38 % (5) | 8 % (1) |
| Other, incl. vocational school | 8 % (2) | 0 % (0) | 17 % (2) |
| Income | |||
| 0–$39 999 | 52 % (13) | 23 % (3) | 83 %(10) |
| ≥$40k | 12 % (3) | 15 % (2) | 8 % (1) |
| Do not know/Prefer not to answer | 36 % (9) | 62 % (8) | 8 % (1) |
| Marital Status | |||
| Married/Living with partner | 36 % (9) | 23 % (3) | 50 % (6) |
| Widowed/Divorced/Separated/Never Married | 48 % (12) | 62 % (8) | 33 % (4) |
| Prefer not to answer | 16 % (4) | 15 % (2) | 17 % (2) |
Ghanaian youth, parents and grandparents in New York City (NYC): socio-ecological model domains, place and themes as forces for dietary maintenance and change
| Place | Theme | Youth | Convergence | Parents and Grandparents |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| New York | ‘ | |||
| Ghana | Growing up in Ghana means preference for Ghanaian food | |||
| New York | Preferences for rice over starchy fruits, tubers and roots | |||
| New York | Youth who grow up in the United States rejected eating African food ‘ | |||
| New York | ‘ | |||
| New York | Foods higher in flavour, fat, salt, sugar and calories as more desirable | |||
| Ghana | ‘ | |||
| New York to Ghana | Parents would send barrels with ultra-processed and packaged foods high in fat, sugar and calories and financial remittances to children still living in Ghana | |||
| New York to Ghana | Monetary remittances provided purchasing power | |||
| New York | Mothers would cook African foods because they want to teach them ‘ | |||
| New York | Youth may reject African foods to fit into United States culture | |||
| New York | Mothers would cook some ‘American’ foods for youth | |||
| New York | Eating together and from one bowl, but, children, men and women eat separately | |||
| New York | Social norms about hand hygiene affect social eating practices out of one bowl | |||
| New York | Busy schedules change meal patterns | |||
| New York | ‘ | |||
| New York | More full meals per day | |||
| New York | Nutrition and health education | |||
| New York | School lunch is free in NYC, so parents encourage youth to try it | |||
| New York | Elders and youth are trying to eat healthier to protect from diet-related diseases | |||
| Ghana and New York | Global recognition of chronic disease risk means that healthier eating habits are becoming socially desirable | |||
| New York | Documentaries and TV personalities promote healthier lifestyles | |||
| New York | Healthier diets after graduating college | |||
| New York | Food in NYC is aplenty and may lead to larger portion sizes and more frequent meals | |||
| Ghana | Foods in Ghana are fresh, clean, organic, and produced without hormones, fertilizers, pesticides and genetically modified organisms | |||
| New York | American foods were considered unclean, genetically modified and produced with hormones, fertilizers and pesticides | |||
| New York | African food ingredients are expensive | |||
| New York | Ingredients to cook African foods are available in NYC Supermarkets | |||
| New York | Processed and packaged African foods are not ‘ | |||
| New York | Concerned about personal hygiene of the person preparing the food | |||
| New York | Lots of unhealthy snack options in the cultural enclave | |||
| New York | Ubiquitous and affordable ‘fried rice’ | |||
| New York | Eating out at Ghanaian or African restaurants was equivalent to eating at home and considered an unnecessary expense | |||
| New York | Eating out only for special occasions: ‘ | |||
| Ghana | Media influences and product placement in films and online media | |||
| Ghana | Vacations and visits to Ghana expose to Ghanaian community, foods and items brought back to NYC | |||
| Ghana | Vacations and visits to the United States expose to American foods | |||
| Ghana | Cities have more processed foods, but rural areas get to eat healthier | |||
| Ghana | Progress and a move towards achieving higher living standards | |||
| Ghana | Globalisation brought fast food, ultra-processed and packaged foods | |||
Italicized text in quotation marks indicates in vivo codes