| Literature DB >> 36010433 |
E Begoña García-Navarro1,2, María José Cáceres-Titos1, Miriam Araujo-Hernández1.
Abstract
The goal of this exploratory study was to analyze the influence of culture on African women's diet considering their role as primary caregivers. The analysis differentiated between Moroccan and Senegalese women and identified the key elements that influence their dietary habits and their health. Using a qualitative methodology, we performed a triangulation of data based on a literature review and a panel of experts, all of which served as the basis for the interview script to conduct 14 semi-structured interviews (n = 7 Moroccan and n = 7 Senegalese). This study reflects the substantial relationship between dietary habits, cultural identity, and health that healthcare providers need to acknowledge. It is important for healthcare practitioners to be culturally competent in order to provide holistic and individualized care.Entities:
Keywords: cultural identity; culture; eating habits; health promotion; nourishment
Year: 2022 PMID: 36010433 PMCID: PMC9407349 DOI: 10.3390/foods11162433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Characteristics addressed in the expert panel.
| Categories/Experts | EX1 | EX2 | EX3 | EX4 | EX5 | EX6 | EX7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Female | Male | Female | Female | Male | Male | Female |
| Age | 59 | 47 | 32 | 39 | 45 | 37 | 44 |
| Profession | Nurse | Doctor | Social worker | Dietitian | Nurse | Dietitian | Doctor |
| Health self-concept | “The concept of health is related to illness, which changes between cultures.” | “Eating a varied diet, with fruit and vegetables, is one of the essential factors that makes them feel healthy.” | “Each person’s health is individual and is influenced by their beliefs.” | “Health care is related to dietary care, influenced by the norms dictated by their religion.” | “Health is conditioned by culture, religion, and even place of residence, as accessibility to resources is not the same for a person in an urban area as it is for a person in a rural area.” | “Because of their culture and religiosity, although health is good and important, it does not come first. It is more important to have a job or to feed themselves.” | “They tend to have a more positivist concept of health, not so much focused on holistic health.” |
| Health differences | “Economic status influences the resources they can access.” | “Gender is a key factor that causes many differences in health.” | “Although it is true that having few economic resources has a negative impact on health, there is a very positive feeling of mutual support.” | “It is necessary to talk about women, people living in rural areas and having few economic resources as possible elements that have a negative impact on health.” | “Men are generally healthier than women.” | “A person’s purchasing power favours his or her health by having access to more resources.” | “It is not as easy for a man as it is for a woman to achieve optimal health because of the different roles they play.” |
| Consequences on health | “In many cases health is measured in the absence of disease.” | “More and more cases of cancer are associated with healthy lifestyles and habits.” | “The strong belief in a superior being sometimes makes them not to take responsibility for the illness, leaving it “to the will of God”.” | “The aforementioned differences in health have a direct impact on health and can lead to numerous diseases.” | “Eating a varied diet based on natural products is a protective factor against the disease.” | “There is fear of serious diseases, but not enough health promotion to prevent them.” | “There is no health-centred care, but there is no desire to get sick either. It is difficult to work on these two aspects.” |
| COVID-19 | “COVID has had a negative impact on the lives of all people.” | “At first there was fear, but the subsistence economy has prioritised starvation over COVID.” | “Having to stop working has sometimes meant that many people did not even have enough to eat.” | “Many people have been afraid and very exposed. There has been a lack of resources to deal with this situation.” | “Religiosity has undoubtedly influenced the process of coping with this situation.” | “Given the choice between dying of Covid19 or starving their family to death, most would prefer the former.” | “All the elements mentioned when talking about health consequences can be applied when talking about COVID.” |
Analytical process in qualitative research (Taylor-Bogdan).
| Stage | Task |
|---|---|
| Discovery | Read the data repeatedly |
| Coding (collection and analysis of all data relating to themes, ideas, concepts, interpretations, and propositions) | Develop coding categories |
| Data revitalization (interpreting data in the context where it was collected) | Data requested or not requested |
Participants’ sociodemographic characteristics.
| Participant | Age | Place of | Place of | Religion | Educational | Language of |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MS1 | 37 | Dakar | Huelva | Muslim | Until 17 years of age | Spanish |
| MS2 | 26 | Fatick | Fatick | Muslim | High School Diploma | French |
| MS3 | 32 | Dakar | Dakar | Christian | Until 17 years of age | French |
| MS4 | 43 | Ziguinchor | Dakar | Christian | High School | French |
| MS5 | 26 | Dakar | Huelva | Christian | High School | Spanish |
| MS6 | 26 | Baker | Dakar | Muslim | High School | French |
| MS7 | 27 | Niakhar | Niakhar | Muslim | No education | Serere-French |
| MM1 | 38 | Oujda | Huelva | Muslim | Until 17 years of age | Spanish |
| MM2 | 24 | Agadir | Huelva | Muslim | Until 17 years of age | Spanish |
| MM3 | 22 | Rabat | Huelva | Muslim | Until 17 years of age | Spanish |
| MM4 | 40 | Oujda | Huelva | Muslim | Until 17 years of age | French |
| MM5 | 38 | Rabat | Huelva | Muslim | High School | Spanish |
| MM6 | 22 | Fkih ben Salah | Huelva | Muslim | Associate Degree | Spanish |
| MM7 | 21 | Larbaat al aounat | Salé | Muslim | High School | French |
Origin of categories and subcategories by population group.
| Dimension | Subcategory | Moroccan Women | Senegalese Women |
|---|---|---|---|
| Health | Resources and | Yes | Yes |
| Religion | Yes | Yes | |
| Culture | Yes | Yes | |
| Accessibility | Yes | Yes | |
| Health promotion | Yes | Yes | |
| Health | Gender | Yes | Yes |
| Economic level | Yes | Yes | |
| Consequences on | Coping with illness | Yes | Yes |
| Solidarity | No | Yes | |
| Cancer | Yes | Yes | |
| COVID-19 | Yes | Yes |
Figure 1Health conditioning factors. Source: Prepared by the authors.
Health self-concept: Senegalese and Moroccan women’s statements.
| Dimension | Population | Quote | Sub-category | Population | Quote |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health | MS3 | “For me to be healthy is to have good health, good hygiene, a healthy life, eat good food, do sports if possible, although we do not have this culture, I have discovered it here in Spain. Even if it costs money, health is priceless.” | Resources and materials | MS7 | “I live in an area where it is very difficult to access fish and there are many families who don’t even consume it because they don’t have the money to buy it.” |
| Religion | MM7 | “Culture is something you share in society, the type of clothes you wear, for example. Religion tells you that you have to be healthy and that you have to observe the Ramadan, but culture is what tells you how to prepare tea or food.” | |||
| Culture | MM1 | “If they offer you tea and you turn it down, it may even be impolite.” | |||
| MM4 | “The culture in each place is the food that is eaten, how and why it is made, the dance performed, and so on.” | ||||
| MM2 | “What I like most about traveling to Morocco is being able to buy fruit and vegetables there. In Spain, for example, potatoes don’t have any flavor, and I think that’s because you use a lot of chemicals.” | MS1 | “It’s usually the man of the family who prepares the tea and is in charge of serving it.” | ||
| MS4 | “In Senegal, tea is a ritual specific to the teranga (Senegalese hospitality), where it is consumed as a community.” | ||||
| MM2 | “In our religion, the Muslim religion, many holidays are associated with food, such as Ramadan or the Feast of the Lamb. The Feast of the Lamb is very important and it is very expensive. People sell their things, to buy the lamb because for Moroccan culture it is a shame if you don’t do it. The religion says, if you don’t have money, people will give you half of theirs so no one will go hungry.” | ||||
| MS3 | “ We Christians, unlike Moroccans, can eat meat and we don’t observe Ramadan, although we have other traditions.” | ||||
| MM7 | “I think I am in good health because I take care of my diet. I eat fruits and vegetables.” | Accessibility | MS7 | “I live in an area where it is very difficult to access fish and there are many families who don’t even take it because they don’t have the money to buy it.” | |
| Health promotion | MM5 | “There is still a long way to go in education and health. They take care of their food and use natural products. There are some who don’t pay attention to their health, just like everywhere else in the world. Others do what is good for their health like eating healthy.” |
Differences and consequences on health and the COVID-19 pandemic: Senegalese and Moroccan women’s statements.
| Dimension | Sub-Category | Population | Quote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Differences in health | Gender | MS2 | “Pregnant women attend prenatal visits and try to take better care of their diet.” |
| MM4 | “It’s getting harder and harder to have children, maybe because of the food. It has taken me 5 years to have children.” | ||
| MM7 | “Infertility is not discussed, they don’t usually have this problem because they don’t have the infertility-enhancing elements such as late age or food.” | ||
| MS3 | “If you walk along the beach, you can see some men doing sports, our culture is healthier because there is no alcohol or tobacco consumption.” | ||
| Economic level | MS3 | “Women who have money take better care of their bodies, but for example, I don’t have time. I am at home and I have to take care of the children, the food, the house... it is difficult for me to take care of my health.” | |
| MM6 | “If women are more liberal and have more money, they take better care of themselves. These [aspects] have a lot of influence. Those who have money get check-ups, do sports, take care of their diet, get vaccinated.” | ||
| Consequences on health | Solidarity | MS7 | “Our family always eats together, all from the same big plate. If someone wants to come and eat with us, they are invited.” |
| Cancer | MM5 | “There is a lot of cancer. Lately everyone hears that so-and-so has cancer. I think it’s a matter of diet, stress...” | |
| COVID-19 | MM2 | “People at the beginning did use the mask, but now they only do it to avoid fines, they don’t take it seriously. Maybe because they believe in God’s will and because they need to work to be able to feed themselves and live.” | |
| MS7 | “Many families had to stop working and that’s what brings in money to eat, live and raise our children. I don’t think we’re prepared for something like this, I’m really scared.” |
Figure 2Gender-related health consequences and lack of resources. Source: Prepared by the authors.