TY - JOUR
T1 - How Do African-American Caregivers Navigate a Food Desert to Feed Their Children? A Photovoice Narrative
AU - Colón-Ramos, Uriyoán
AU - Monge-Rojas, Rafael
AU - Stevenson, Tambra R.
AU - Burns, Haley
AU - Thurman, Shaneka
AU - Gittelsohn, Joel
AU - Gurman, Tilly A.
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank our community advisory board and community organizers for assisting with the recruitment and engagement of participants. We specifically thank Coleman Milling, Rev. Lionel Edmonds, Deborah Nix, and DC Promise Neighborhoods. We are grateful to Claudia Trezza, N?lida Ramos Torres, and Ivonne Rivera for their assistance with the transcription and initial analyses and to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation New Connections Network for supporting the first author (U.C.R.) training in intersectional and qualitative research methods at the University of Maryland's Intersectional Qualitative Research Methods Institute during the writing of this paper. Finally, we are indebted to the participating parents and grandparents in Wards 7 and 8 for the dialogue and for sharing their perspectives with us and allowing us to share ours as well., U. Col?n-Ramos conceived the study and design, led the analyses, interpretation of results, and drafted the manuscript and theoretical model. R. Monge-Rojas contributed significantly to drafting the manuscript, interpretation of results, and conceptualization of the expanded theoretical model. H. Burns contributed to the data collection and interpretation of results. T. A. Gurman contributed to the design of the study, interpretation of results, and revision of the manuscript. S. Thurman contributed to the data collection, data analysis, and interpretation of results. J. Gittelsohn and T. R. Stevenson contributed to critical feedback and revision of the manuscript. All authors contributed to the drafting of the manuscript and have approved the final version.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics
PY - 2018/11
Y1 - 2018/11
N2 - Objectives: To determine how African-American caregivers living in a food desert navigate neighborhood resources to procure foods for their children and to identify actions to improve those resources. Design: Using the Photovoice approach, we conducted two sets of individual in-depth interviews with 16 African-American primary caregivers of children (total of 32 interviews) and one culminating workshop (n=10 participants). Data were systematically analyzed according to the Social Ecological Framework to evaluate the role of different environments in shaping individual decisions. Setting: Urban, low-income and geographically marginalized neighborhoods. Results: Despite the challenges of living in a food desert, caregivers perceived that they were providing the foods that they wanted for their children. These perceptions were based on their own health concerns, food customs, time and convenience, and responses to their children's food preferences. Caregivers were resourceful in how they procured these foods, searching for quality and better-priced foods. They relied on their friends, family, and local/national programs to mitigate the challenges of the food desert. Caregivers were interested in taking action to improve the underlying determinants of food access and choice (eg, affordable housing, job training, nutrition knowledge, food shopping experience). Conclusion: These African-American caregivers procured foods they thought were best for their children by relying on their strong social relationships and national and local food programs to navigate the food desert. Public health nutrition interventions that aim to reduce diet-related disparities should look beyond the presence or absence of supermarkets in food deserts to address multisectoral determinants of access while shaping food choices.
AB - Objectives: To determine how African-American caregivers living in a food desert navigate neighborhood resources to procure foods for their children and to identify actions to improve those resources. Design: Using the Photovoice approach, we conducted two sets of individual in-depth interviews with 16 African-American primary caregivers of children (total of 32 interviews) and one culminating workshop (n=10 participants). Data were systematically analyzed according to the Social Ecological Framework to evaluate the role of different environments in shaping individual decisions. Setting: Urban, low-income and geographically marginalized neighborhoods. Results: Despite the challenges of living in a food desert, caregivers perceived that they were providing the foods that they wanted for their children. These perceptions were based on their own health concerns, food customs, time and convenience, and responses to their children's food preferences. Caregivers were resourceful in how they procured these foods, searching for quality and better-priced foods. They relied on their friends, family, and local/national programs to mitigate the challenges of the food desert. Caregivers were interested in taking action to improve the underlying determinants of food access and choice (eg, affordable housing, job training, nutrition knowledge, food shopping experience). Conclusion: These African-American caregivers procured foods they thought were best for their children by relying on their strong social relationships and national and local food programs to navigate the food desert. Public health nutrition interventions that aim to reduce diet-related disparities should look beyond the presence or absence of supermarkets in food deserts to address multisectoral determinants of access while shaping food choices.
KW - African American
KW - Diet disparities
KW - Food desert
KW - Food environment
KW - Photovoice
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jand.2018.04.016
DO - 10.1016/j.jand.2018.04.016
M3 - Article
C2 - 29934282
AN - SCOPUS:85048563904
SN - 2212-2672
VL - 118
SP - 2045
EP - 2056
JO - Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics
JF - Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics
IS - 11
ER -