Traditional Individual and Environmental Determinants of Healthy Eating in Vihiga County, Western Kenya
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Action Research
2.3. Focus Groups Discussions
2.4. Study Design of FGDs
2.5. Theoretical Model to Study Eating Behavior
2.6. Semi-Structured Questionnaire
2.7. Participation
2.8. Content Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Cognitive Determinants about Healthy Eating
3.1.1. Concepts of Healthy Eating
3.1.2. Knowledge of Food Groups and Perceived Benefits
3.2. Environmental Determinants
Environmental Barriers to Eating a Diversified Diet
Determinant | Quotations |
---|---|
Economic barrier | “Money is the major problem. You can only buy the food if you have money.” [W, 26] “Lack of money will make one not to get the foods.” [M, 70] “You like to eat rice but there is no money. Money is the major problem.” [W, 28] “The foods are very expensive. We cannot afford it with the money we have.” [M, 28] “Prices are high … fruits you cannot afford when you don’t have enough money.” [W, 23] |
Physical barrier | “Our farms are small. Cannot have all the mix of all foods in one farm.” [W, 45] “The farms are too small to plant varieties. There is no space for keeping domestic animals.” [M, 44] “Money can be available, but the food is not available on the market.” [M, 22] “There are seasons where we have food and other seasons where we don’t have because of the climate change.” [M, 28] “During the dry season, you may plant different foods, but they will not grow well to give you enough. And, also during the rainy seasons, you will not get enough because some foods don’t like too much rain.” [W, 52] “The markets are too far. … you have to go to Kisumu to purchase something” [W, 26] |
3.3. Individual and Socio-Cultural Barriers of a Diversified Diet
3.4. Cues to Action
“money we get from the casual labor … not be enough to … save, because the work is not there all the time.”[W, 36]
“If we can get somebody to help us to get fertilizers to use for planting, we will harvest enough.”[W, 49]
“Seedlings should be provided to put in practice what we have learned.”[W, 32]
“If we can get farms outside our area and we will plant different foods.”[M, 40]
“… educated on new methods of farming.”[W, 40]
“… on how to use the local manure other than the fertilizers.”[W, 42]
“when keeping chicken, we should be educated on which foods to give to them.”[M, 19]
“how to create our own manure from the resources we have, for example maize stalks.”[W,49]
“… we have the food but we need to know what to do with it. It should be given nutrition education.”[W, 29]
“Polytechnics to train the youth in the nearby small towns.”[M, 44]
“Education should be provided by the government to children who want to learn.”[W, 37]
“One can educate one another on diet education. One who is aware should educate the one who doesn’t know.”[W, 22]
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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Layer 1 (Villages) | Layer 2 (Gender-Age Range) |
---|---|
Essunza | Men > 18 Women ≤ 30 Women > 30 |
Itumbu | Men > 18 Women ≤ 30 Women > 30 |
Mambai | Men > 18 Women ≤ 30 Women > 30 |
Masana | Men > 18 Women ≤ 30 Women > 30 |
Wanondi | Men > 18 Women ≤ 30 Women > 30 |
Question’s Goal | Determinant | Main Question | Alternative Question * |
---|---|---|---|
Introduction of participants | Food preferences | What is your name and what is your favorite food? | What is your name and where do you come from? |
Exploration of cognitive determinants | Knowledge about healthy eating | How would you describe a good diet? | How would you describe a bad diet? Which foods would you consider to be healthy? |
Knowledge about food groups | How would you group the foods you know as healthy? | Which food group(s) do you consume more often? Which food groups do you consume in more amounts? | |
Exploration of individual barriers | Individual barriers | Why people do not eat a variety of foods? | Why cannot freely select a variety of foods for your meals? |
What stops you from freely eating a certain food or food groups? | Which foods cannot be freely eaten by you or other members of the family? What would happen if that person would eat that specific food? | ||
Exploration of environmental barriers | Environmental barriers | Which people, apart from you, stops you from freely selecting a variety of foods to eat in a meal? | Why cannot you freely select from a wide variety of foods to eat in each meal? |
Brainstorm on cues to action | Facilitators of change | What would help you to eat more diverse? | How can others help you to achieve dietary diversity? |
Raking of cues to action | Top facilitator | Which are the 3 most important facilitators |
Characteristics | Total n (%) |
---|---|
Gender Male Female | 39 (32) 83 (68) |
Marital Status Married Single Widowed | 91 (74.6) 24 (19.7) 7 (5.7) |
Education Primary (incomplete) Primary Secondary University | 28 (23) 48 (39.3) 36 (29.5) 10 (8.2) |
Occupation Farmer Housewife Formal Employment Self-employed Casual worker Unemployed Other | 38 (31.1) 33 (27) 7 (5.7) 4 (11.5) 4 (3.3) 12 (9.8) 14 (11.5) |
Religion Christian Muslim | 121 (99.2) 1 (0.8) |
Determinant | Quotations |
---|---|
Concepts of healthy eating | “Food that has the complete nutrients that make my day complete.” [M, 56] “For example, breakfast you can take tea with milk with sweet potatoes and finish with a fruit. Lunchtime, I mostly use porridge either maize meal or wimbi mixed with cassava. Then, at night you can eat ugali and chicken if it is available.” [M, 19] “Food should not be of only one type, but of different types.” [M, 56] “You have to change foods … when you make porridge and ugali it is the same food. You can change to tea with milk, at lunch you eat beans and in the evening you eat ugali. And you add a fruit.” [W, 45] |
Knowledge of food groups | “It [Carbohydrate] adds energy to the body.” [M, 40] “Foods that build the body, the food that has proteins.” [W, 40] “Vitamins give good health. Fruits like avocado, oranges they have good health” [W, 28] “Good food is the one that protects the body from diseases.” [M, 40] “Ripe bananas help in digestion.” [W, 24] “… spinach helps in clearing the stomach for digestion.” [W, 30] “Managu helps the stomach for digestion.” [W, 25] “Green vegetables are good because they add blood and it is good.” [W, 30] “When I eat ugali and traditional vegetable they add energy. It helps me to do digging because it is stronger compared when I have eaten rice. This is good food.” [M, 45] “Ugali stays long in the stomach and I can do a lot of work because of the energy. And I can stay long without feeling hungry.” [W, 29] |
Benefits of healthy eating | “Food that makes us happy … one that helps you carry family chores especially the married ones, you perform well in bed.” [M, 38] “Food with a good taste is a good food.” [W, 29] “Food that has a good appearance, that attracts to eat.” [W, 32] “Also the smell of the food, the aroma.” [M, 28] “Food should not be of only one type, but of different.” [M, 56] “You change foods … when you make porridge and ugali it is the same food. You can change to tea with milk, at lunch you eat beans and in the evening, you eat ugali. And you add a fruit.” [W, 45] |
Determinant | Quotations |
---|---|
Intrinsic barriers | “Diseases, for example, ulcers. You are told not to eat for example sukuma wiki, githeri.” [W, 26] “Many disabled people cannot get food as they could wish.” [W, 21] “Most parents have no knowledge of a balanced diet; they should be educated.” [M, 25] “Lack of knowledge. Someone has enough but doesn’t know how to mix.” [W, 31] “For example, for the traditional vegetables some people tend to ignore eating them.” [W, 40] “It’s laziness. Women should work hard on the farm. They should plant some foods other than buying everything from the market.” [W, 53] |
Socio-cultural barriers | “One has no job but has ten children. … Children will compete for food because there is not enough.” [M, 44] “Lack of peace in the house. I cannot cook when I am annoyed.” [W, 25] “It is also lack of education. … make one know how to eat different foods.” [M, 45] “Theft cases. Thieves steal the foods from the farms when it’s ready.” [W, 32] |
Taboos | “The gizzard is supposed to be eaten by the men of the house, because the man is the household head. It is a sign of respect to the man.” [M, 54] “The gizzard should not be eaten by women, it’s for men.” [W, 45] “Gizzard is the sweetest part of the chicken. That is why they were denied.” [M, 19] “Children are not supposed to eat the gizzard because they will be competing with their fathers.” [M, 24] “When you take it, you become like the owner of the home and we are not supposed to be like the head of the home.” [W, 37] “Even up to date the children cannot eat the part of the gizzard. That one is serious.” [M, 38] “Backbone of chicken. It’s a respect to the men.” [W, 27] “The backbone has a lot of fats and it’s very sweet. They just don’t want women to be stronger than the men.” [W, 50] “Small kids, uncircumcised kids, should not eat chicken legs … when they go for circumcision, blood will come out too much.” [W, 37] “Women who have given birth cannot eat any type of fish until the baby is six months … body will get cracks that remove water.” [W, 50] “Pregnant women should not eat meat from a rabbit. Otherwise, they will give birth to a child who sleeps a lot.” [W, 37] “Lactating mothers should not eat meat from the rabbit. It will dry the breast milk. You will not have milk to breastfeed.” [W, 29] “… small children under the age of 2 years, they should not eat eggs, otherwise it will affect their speeches. Their tongue will become heavy and they delay to talk.” [M, 38] |
Restricted Food | Affected Group | FGDs | Negative Beliefs |
---|---|---|---|
Chicken Gizzard Backbone Legs Eggs | Children < 2 years Women Women Boys through circumcision Children < 2 years | 7 8 5 5 10 | Children disrespecting fathers Women get empowered at household Women get stronger than men Excessive bleeding Delayed child’s talking skills |
Fish | Lactating women | 4 | Reduced milk production; Skin irritation; Dehydration |
Rabbit | Pregnant and lactating women | 4 | Offspring having bad manners; Child with excessive sleep; reduced milk production |
Omena | Lactating women | 3 | Reduced milk production; Skin irritation |
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Penafiel, D.; Termote, C.; Van Damme, P. Traditional Individual and Environmental Determinants of Healthy Eating in Vihiga County, Western Kenya. Nutrients 2022, 14, 2791. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14142791
Penafiel D, Termote C, Van Damme P. Traditional Individual and Environmental Determinants of Healthy Eating in Vihiga County, Western Kenya. Nutrients. 2022; 14(14):2791. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14142791
Chicago/Turabian StylePenafiel, Daniela, Celine Termote, and Patrick Van Damme. 2022. "Traditional Individual and Environmental Determinants of Healthy Eating in Vihiga County, Western Kenya" Nutrients 14, no. 14: 2791. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14142791
APA StylePenafiel, D., Termote, C., & Van Damme, P. (2022). Traditional Individual and Environmental Determinants of Healthy Eating in Vihiga County, Western Kenya. Nutrients, 14(14), 2791. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14142791