Cultural aspects of African American eating patterns.

The high mortality from diet-related diseases among African Americans strongly suggests a need to adopt diets lower in total fat, saturated fat and salt and higher in fiber. However, such changes would be contrary to some traditional African American cultural practices. Focus group interviews were used to explore cultural aspects of eating patterns among low- and middle-income African Americans recruited from an urban community in Pennsylvania. In total, 21 males and 32 females, aged 13-65+ years were recruited using a networking technique. Participants identified eating practices commonly attributed to African Americans and felt that these were largely independent of socioeconomic status. They were uncertain about links between African American eating patterns and African origins but clear about influences of slavery and economic disadvantage. The perception that African American food patterns were characteristically adaptive to external conditions, suggest that, for effective dietary change in African American communities, changes in the food availability will need to precede or take place in parallel with changes recommended to individuals. Cultural attitudes about where and with whom food is eaten emerged as being equivalent in importance to attitudes about specific foods. These findings emphasize the importance of continued efforts to identify ways to increase the relevance of cultural context and meanings in dietary counseling so that health and nutrition interventions are anchored in values as perceived, in this case, by African Americans.

[1]  F. Fanon Black Skin, White Masks , 1952, My Black Stars.

[2]  J. Sattler Racial "experimenter effects" in experimentation, testing, interviewing, and psychotherapy. , 1970, Psychological bulletin.

[3]  L. F. Snow Folk medical beliefs and their implications for care of patients. A review bases on studies among black Americans. , 1974, Annals of internal medicine.

[4]  Integrating ethnographic research with nutrition studies. , 1981, Federation proceedings.

[5]  A. Kroeger,et al.  Anthropological and socio-medical health care research in developing countries. , 1983, Social science & medicine.

[6]  Toward a Theory of Popular Health Practices in the Black Community. , 1984 .

[7]  E. Eng,et al.  Institutionalizing Social Support Through the Church and into the Community , 1985, Health education quarterly.

[8]  M. L. Axelson The impact of culture on food-related behavior. , 1986, Annual review of nutrition.

[9]  George A. Hacker,et al.  Marketing Booze to Blacks , 1987 .

[10]  Rootwork: Description of an Ethnomedical System in the American South , 1987, Southern medical journal.

[11]  A. Murcott Sociological and social anthropological approaches to food and eating. , 1988, World review of nutrition and dietetics.

[12]  Robert L. Blake,et al.  Integrating quantitative and qualitative methods in family research. , 1989 .

[13]  R. Merritt,et al.  Participation rates, weight loss, and blood pressure changes among obese women in a nutrition-exercise program. , 1989, Public health reports.

[14]  J. A. Baldwin,et al.  African-American and European-American cultural differences as assessed by the worldviews paradigm: An empirical analysis. , 1990 .

[15]  Edward F. McQuarrie,et al.  Focus Groups: Theory and Practice , 1991 .

[16]  White Sl,et al.  Promoting healthy diets and active lives to hard-to-reach groups: market research study. , 1990 .

[17]  P. Whelton,et al.  Weight-loss experience of black and white participants in NHLBI-sponsored clinical trials. , 1991, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[18]  M. Leininger Culture Care Diversity and Universality: A Theory of Nursing , 1991 .

[19]  R. Jeffery Population perspectives on the prevention and treatment of obesity in minority populations. , 1991, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[20]  S. Kumanyika,et al.  Models for dietary and weight change in African-American women: identifying cultural components. , 1992, Ethnicity & disease.

[21]  C. Airhihenbuwa Health promotion for child survival in Africa: implications for cultural appropriateness. , 1993, Hygie.

[22]  S. Kumanyika Diet and nutrition as influences on the morbiditymortality gap , 1993 .

[23]  N. Cook,et al.  Feasibility and efficacy of sodium reduction in the Trials of Hypertension Prevention, phase I. Trials of Hypertension Prevention Collaborative Research Group. , 1993, Hypertension.

[24]  T. Baranowski,et al.  5 a day for better health: a new research initiative. , 1994, Journal of the American Dietetic Association.