In Their Own Words: Parents and Key Informants’ Views on Nutrition Education and Family Health Behaviors
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Perceptions of Health
3.1.1. Health Definitions
3.1.2. Health Concerns
3.2. Relationships
3.2.1. Children
3.2.2. Elders
3.2.3. Medical Professionals
3.3. Health Behaviors
3.3.1. Current Habits
3.3.2. Positive Changes
3.3.3. Recommend Changes
3.4. Facilitators
3.4.1. Household Facilitators
3.4.2. Community Facilitators
3.5. Barriers
3.5.1. Time
3.5.2. Cost
3.5.3. Community and Societal Barriers
3.5.4. Literacy
3.6. Desired Changes
3.6.1. Personal Changes
3.6.2. Community Changes
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parent Focus Group Questions |
|
Key Informant Interview Questions |
|
Recruitment Site | Brief Description of Services | Number of Participants Recruited | Number of Focus Groups |
---|---|---|---|
1 | An affordable housing community located in SE DC | 8 parents | 1 (conducted in English) |
2 | A non-profit organization for underserved youth and families located in SE DC | 7 parents | 1 (conducted in English) |
3 | A non-profit for underserved women and families located in NW DC | 2 parents | 1 (conducted in English) |
4 | A low-cost medical clinic located in NW DC | 5 parents | 1 (conducted in Spanish) |
Demographic Variables | Parents (n = 22) |
---|---|
Age (y) | 44.18 ± 13.31 |
Gender (% female) | 90.91 |
Race (%) | |
Black/African American | 63.64 |
Black but NOT African American | 13.64 |
Latinx | 18.18 |
Biracial | 4.55 |
Other | 0 |
Education (% parents only) | |
Some High School | 13.64 |
High School Diploma | 50.00 |
College Degree | 4.55 |
Graduate Degree | 9.09 |
Unstated | 13.64 |
Number of Children in Home | 2.55 ± 1.61 |
Theme | Subtheme | Definition | Sample Quote |
---|---|---|---|
Perceptions of Health | Health Definitions | How health is defined and understood by parents/caregivers and within a community | “Healthy for me is like exercise, eating right. That’s two of the main things.” (parent) “I think that being healthy involves social wellbeing, emotional wellbeing, physical wellbeing, there’s a lot of factors that influence our health. Being healthy is, having access to healthy food, having access to a safe environment at work, having a good paying job to afford housing and your children and your family.” (key informant) |
Health Concerns | Health issues that are concerning to parents and caregivers | “I think soda is a big issue” (parent) | |
Health Recommendations | Behaviors of parents/caregivers and key informants believe will improve family health | “Our kids need to know how to eat a lot of vegetables, water.” (parent) “They’re doing what they need to do to go to their doctor’s appointments and the follow up, and they’re taking advantage of the services that are available to them.” (key informant) | |
Relationships | Children | How children contribute to parent/caregiver health behaviors | “I have a 12-year old, he eats a lot. So we usually do breakfast, snacks, lunch, more snacks, snacks again, dinner, but I try to balance it…I try to introduce new stuff to them.” (parent) |
Elders | How older adults contribute to parents and caregivers’ health behaviors | “Well I usually get the recipes from my daughter’s grandmother on her dad’s side. So she like sends her with a lot of good recipes and clippings or you know she has a book she sends.” (parent) | |
Medical Professionals | How medical professionals contribute to parent/caregiver health behaviors | “I went to the doctor and realized I had high cholesterol…and from that time on, I had to start learning how to eat.” (parent) | |
Health Behaviors | Current Habits | Descriptions of current health habits and norms during mealtimes | “We’ll never really sit at a table together. It’s like we’re separately eating, everybody eating on like their own time. Because I may not even eat until after they already went to bed or something and then I’m gonna fix me a plate.” (parent) |
Positive Changes | Changes parents and caregivers reported making in the past to improve their health | “Changed from fried. We used to fry a lot, so changed from frying to like eating more baked chicken or fish.” (parent) | |
Barriers | Time | Difficulty preparing healthy meals because of hectic schedules and time constraints | “So when I normally work twelve hours a day, I eat at lunchtime, let’s say, but it’s not like sitting down to eat.” (parent) “Because of the fast way of life and with multiple jobs, moms tend to rely on McDonalds, Burger King, and rely on the food that is given at schools, that involves processed foods, and at lunch, kids are eating pizza…I know parents try to do their best at trying to provide healthy food. I think it has to do with the fast-paced environment.” (key informant) |
Putting Other First | Difficulty prioritizing one’s own health needs over family members’ demands | “That’s why I’ll be sick a lot because I’ll be busy doing stuff for other people.” (parent) “I have women who come to the clinic who want to eat healthy, but she has to prepare a meal for herself and kids and a separate one for her husband.” (key informant) | |
Cost | Inability to afford healthy foods | “We can’t afford healthy foods, because if you get organic lettuce, might be $1.50 a pound. Where regular lettuce it’ll be 97 cents a pound, and I got five kids to feed.” (parent) “It has to do with economic status, making enough money to pay rent and put some food on the table. A lot of our patients view eating healthy as more expensive, that is their perception.” (key informant) | |
Accessibility | Inability to access services related to health and nutrition | “If I know something is healthy but I don’t have access to it, it is going to be really hard for me to do that.” (key informant) | |
Community and Societal Barriers | Aspects of the community and United States’ society that make healthy eating challenging | “The youngest, today he told me this exactly, ‘Mommy, in summer school they give me hamburgers and hotdogs. This isn’t lunch, this is junk food.’” (parent) | |
Literacy | Lack of knowledge about healthy eating or inability to easily interpret information about healthy eating | “A lot of our families in our area, they have certain situations you know…Like when we do our recipes for our programs we make sure they’re simple steps, like 5 steps, we wouldn’t have like 15 steps, simple ingredients, no more than 5 or 6 ingredients.” (key informant) | |
Safety | Concerns about danger in one’s community that interfere with healthy living | “I think it’s a matter of feeling safe in your community. So that you can get out and walk at any time. That you can walk any time, day or night. Maybe you don’t walk after dark. Or after dark, you want somebody to walk with you. So I think it could be a safety issue, especially for outdoor activities.” (key informant) | |
Facilitators | Household | Aspects of the home environment that promote health | “I try to get simple snacks like baked chips instead of regular chips, or more fruit.” (parent) |
Community | Aspects of the surrounding community that promote health | “With [name of local clinic], they have nutritionists and I started working with a nutritionist.” (parent) “The community I work with is really resilient and really value family and children and friends and partners” (key informant) | |
Desired Changes | Personal | Changes parents and caregivers would like to make in their own lives | “I’m actually thinking about vegetables. I don’t eat very many vegetables, but I know that I need to incorporate that into my meals.” (parent) |
Community | Changes parents and caregivers would like to see occur in their surrounding community and future health programming key informants hope to see | “So a lot of times when parents aren’t showing up maybe because they see something on a walk but they don’t understand what it is so we have to use our voices …there are people out there that can’t read and they’re not going to say ‘hey I can’t read.” (parent) “What if we had a mini grocery store in the community? And maybe it’s discounted or something. With fresh produce that you could get at Harris Teeter or Whole Foods or something, but it’s right there in the community” (key informant) |
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McManus, K.E.; Bertrand, A.; Snelling, A.M.; Cotter, E.W. In Their Own Words: Parents and Key Informants’ Views on Nutrition Education and Family Health Behaviors. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 8155. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18158155
McManus KE, Bertrand A, Snelling AM, Cotter EW. In Their Own Words: Parents and Key Informants’ Views on Nutrition Education and Family Health Behaviors. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(15):8155. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18158155
Chicago/Turabian StyleMcManus, Katherine E., Adrian Bertrand, Anastasia M. Snelling, and Elizabeth W. Cotter. 2021. "In Their Own Words: Parents and Key Informants’ Views on Nutrition Education and Family Health Behaviors" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 15: 8155. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18158155
APA StyleMcManus, K. E., Bertrand, A., Snelling, A. M., & Cotter, E. W. (2021). In Their Own Words: Parents and Key Informants’ Views on Nutrition Education and Family Health Behaviors. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(15), 8155. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18158155