| Literature DB >> 36142014 |
Christine C Ferguson1, Seung E Jung2, Jeannine C Lawrence2, Joy W Douglas2, Anne Halli-Tierney3, Chuong Bui4, Amy C Ellis2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this mixed methods study was to explore the impact of COVID-19 on the ability of people with Parkinson disease (PwPs) and their care-partners to perform food-related activities (FRA) and PwPs' overall diet quality.Entities:
Keywords: Mediterranean diet; Parkinson disease; diet; diet survey; food-related activities; healthy diet; qualitative
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36142014 PMCID: PMC9517133 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191811741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
COVID-19 Interview Questions.
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Since the pandemic, have your grocery shopping habits changed? How so? Since the pandemic, have your visits to restaurants changed? How so? Since the pandemic, have your food-related decisions changed? How so? Since the pandemic, have your cooking and meal preparation changed? How so? Are there other ways the pandemic has affected your food-related activities? How so? |
Characteristics of PwPs and care-partners.
| Demographic | n | % | M ± SD | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 5 | 45.5 | ||
| Female | 6 | 54.5 | ||
| Age | 65.8 ± 5.2 | 60–76 | ||
| Ethnicity | ||||
| White | 11 | 100 | ||
| PD duration, total | 10.1 ± 6.4 | 0–26 | ||
| Less than 5 years | 1 | 9.1 | ||
| Between 5 and 10 years | 6 | 54.5 | ||
| Greater than 10 years | 4 | 36.4 | ||
| MDS-UPDRS II, total | 24.2 ± 9.2 | 14–42 | ||
| Mild disability | 3 | 27.3 | ||
| Moderate disability | 5 | 45.5 | ||
| Severe disability | 3 | 27.3 | ||
| Education | ||||
| Some college | 3 | 27.3 | ||
| College graduate | 8 | 72.7 | ||
| History of COVID-19 | ||||
| Yes | 1 | 9.1 | ||
| No | 10 | 90.9 | ||
|
| ||||
| Age | 66.9 ± 5.1 | 59–77 |
MDS-UPDRS II, Movement Disorder Society United Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale Part II; PwPs, people living with Parkinson disease.
PwPs’ diet score results.
| Diet Score | M ± SD | Range | Maximum Possible Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| HEI | 73.0 ± 6.3 | 66.8–82.0 | 100 |
| Mediterranean | 29.2 ± 6.6 | 22.0–45.0 | 55 |
| MIND | 10.4 ± 1.8 | 8.0–13.5 | 15 |
DASH, Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension; HEI, Healthy Eating Index; M, mean; MIND, Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay; PwPs, people living with Parkinson disease; SD, standard deviation.
Themes identified through dyadic interviews with PwPs and their care-partners about the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on food-related activities.
| Themes | Demonstrative Quotes | |
|---|---|---|
|
| P4CP: | Just cooking more, because as we said, we don’t eat out as often. |
| P11CP: | But we, we still might grab something to go, but that, either. We don’t do that nearly as often as we did. | |
| P1CP: | The only difference is that we eat in more, we don’t go out, but far as our daily diets, what we fix to eat, I don’t think it’s changed that much at all really. | |
| P7CP: | I guess sometimes there’s a lot of other responsibilities in his care. So sometimes it’s hard to get everything in with making larger food items. If I, if it wasn’t the pandemic that we, you know, would occasionally eat out more than we do. So, we’re doing a lot more food prep, so it’s more time consuming… I have to say that we probably have enjoyed more comfort foods of course. I’ve done more baking, lots of sweets, and I think that probably is something that we’re paying for. We were having less exercise because we’re going out less and eating more sweets and probably more chips and snack type foods as well. | |
| P2CP: | Well, I think, you asked about how a change since COVID. And I think what’s changed for us is mostly eating in, and eating in really has made us feel better. Even though we’ve been kind of closed in, not eating the run by and pick up fried chicken and French fries, and not run by and pick up a prefab something. Or something that’s been soaked in something, um, has made us- even though it’s not been an ideal situation by any stretch of the imagination and sometimes nerve racking- as far as food goes, I think we eat better than we did. Because we’re eating more at home, you know, things that we know what happened to ‘em before we got it. | |
|
| P3: | When COVID came along, it’s like, well, my system is probably not as hearty as his so he’s the one who’s going to go out and do the grocery shopping and stuff. |
| P10: | Yeah. Initially, like you said, I was. I wasn’t going to the stores at all. And then, you know, after three months or so I started going on occasion, and now I go weekly or a couple times a week. | |
| P2CP: | The difficulty might be, getting tired in the grocery store, because sometimes he’ll have to go to the car before I get finished. If there’s lots of people, the anxiety, you know, that kind of comes with too many people, especially during COVID getting around you. And I’ll say why don’t you just go to car, and I’ll finish this, you know, whatever. | |
| P1CP: | When COVID first happened, we got a few, you know, curbside pickup, but now I go get them pretty much anytime I want you know, just precautionary measures and just go shopping, and we live close to several stores. That’s not an issue as far as driving. | |
|
| P6: | Well we used to have at least one or two or maybe three grandkids come every weekend before the pandemic and so I always have to cook for them… And now that with a pandemic they’re not coming over like that anymore. |
| P8: | It cut out, pretty much all of our home entertainment, you know, like having people over, you know, enjoying a good meal with friends and family. | |
| P3: | We’ve had, I could probably count on one hand, the number of couples we’ve had over since COVID started, and in every instance, we ate outside on our patio. | |
| P5: | What we have done is, friends would say ‘let’s go out for dinner.’ Well instead of going out for dinner, go get what you want, in a carry out, and we’ll meet on our deck and eat or dine together. So that’s kind of been what we’ve done and that’s probably only done about three times this whole year. | |
COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; PwPs, people living with Parkinson disease.