| Literature DB >> 35882826 |
Tuyen Nguyen1, Tiffany Trat2, Ngoc Thanh Tieu3, Linda Vu3, Karen Sokal-Gutierrez4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Vietnam's post-war globalization, economic development, and urbanization have contributed to a nutrition transition from traditional diets to highly-processed diets, and increased prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity. Our study aims to explore the attitudes and behaviors driving this epidemic.Entities:
Keywords: Child obesity; Diet; Malnutrition; Physical activity; Vietnam
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35882826 PMCID: PMC9374652 DOI: 10.1007/s10995-022-03502-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matern Child Health J ISSN: 1092-7875
Themes and subthemes
| Themes | Subthemes | Average counts |
|---|---|---|
Change in diet between generations | Economic growth, globalization, and urbanization post Vietnam war | 44 |
| Change from large families and food scarcity to smaller families and food abundance | ||
| Change from traditional rural diet to urbanized processed foods and fast food diet | ||
Preference for “rounder” children | Parents define “skinny” as “unhealthy” | 36 |
| Parents believe boys need more food and should be “taller” and “larger” | ||
| Using endearing terms to describe overweight/obese children | ||
| Associating “rounder” appearance with higher socioeconomic status and ability to support their family | ||
Unhealthy feeding practices | Increased frequency and overfeeding during meals and snacks | 100 |
| Promotion of sugar-sweetened milk as healthy | ||
| Increased access to sugar-sweetened snacks & beverages and fast food | ||
Reduced physical activity | Parents perceive urban environment and traffic to be unsafe for children to walk to school or play outdoors | 49 |
| Children spend free time studying instead of playing due to increased academic pressure | ||
| Increased sedentary behavior in children due to use of electronics/new technologies | ||
Increasing awareness of child obesity | Parental action to limit sweets and overfeeding to prevent overweight/obesity | 43 |
| Increased parental concern about accessibility of sugar-sweetened foods and beverages at school | ||
| Parental hopes for increased government action to prevent overweight/obesity |
Fig. 1Summarizes the historical, social and cultural context, with the identified themes, that may contribute to childhood obesity in Vietnam. It details how parents’ and caregivers’ war-time experience of extreme poverty, food insecurity, fear of child malnutrition and focus on child survival laid the foundation in the current environment of economic growth, food abundance, urbanization and technology for a drive to overfeed children, keep them safe, and encourage their academic development more than physical activity, contributing to child obesity