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Exploring meal frequency and vegetable intake among immigrants 70 years or older in Sweden : Secondary analysis of data from the Promoting Aging Migrants Capabilities study

Johannesson, Julie LU ; Gustafsson, Susanne ; Slinde, Frode and Rothenberg, Elisabet (2021) In Journal of Ethnic Foods 8(1).
Abstract

Background: Earlier research regarding immigrants has shown that lifestyle and environmental factors are of importance for the risk of developing certain diseases. Food habits are one of these factors. As there is little research concerning immigrants and food habits, the aim of the present paper was to explore food habits operationalised as meal frequency and vegetable intake among a group of older immigrants in Sweden. Specifically, the following questions were explored: changes in food habits when migrating, missing food from the native country, gender differences in food habits and association between food habits and self-rated health and well-being. Method: A total of 131 persons from the health-promoting study “Promoting Aging... (More)

Background: Earlier research regarding immigrants has shown that lifestyle and environmental factors are of importance for the risk of developing certain diseases. Food habits are one of these factors. As there is little research concerning immigrants and food habits, the aim of the present paper was to explore food habits operationalised as meal frequency and vegetable intake among a group of older immigrants in Sweden. Specifically, the following questions were explored: changes in food habits when migrating, missing food from the native country, gender differences in food habits and association between food habits and self-rated health and well-being. Method: A total of 131 persons from the health-promoting study “Promoting Aging Migrants’ Capabilities” (PAMC) conducted in Gothenburg, Sweden, 2011–2014, were included in this exploratory secondary analysis of questionnaire data. Participants were 70 years or older, cognitively intact, and living in ordinary housing. They had all migrated to Sweden from Finland or the Western Balkan Region (Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and Serbia). Descriptive statistics as well as binary logistic regression were used to answer the research questions. Results: Forty-eight percent of the participants in PAMC reported that they had changed their food habits when migrating, and 17% considered that they missed certain foods from their native country. Most of the participants migrated to Sweden more than 20 years ago. There was a significant difference in self-rated health in favour of the male participants (p = 0.02), but food habits, operationalised as meal frequency and vegetable intake, were not associated with self-rated health or life satisfaction. Conclusion: Men rated their health as better than women did, but food habits operationalised as meal frequency or vegetable intake, were not associated with self-rated health or life satisfaction. Results from this secondary analysis were affected by methodological shortcomings. Further studies to understand the role of food habits in relation to health in a migration context are desired. Trial registration: NCT01841853, Registered April 29, 2013. Retrospectively registered.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Exploratory study, Immigrants, Life satisfaction, Meal frequency, Older adults, Secondary analysis, Self-rated health, Vegetable intake
in
Journal of Ethnic Foods
volume
8
issue
1
article number
39
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85121011224
ISSN
2352-6181
DOI
10.1186/s42779-021-00115-2
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
432188fd-cc88-4e51-9f7f-4e45261bd079
date added to LUP
2022-01-27 12:46:45
date last changed
2022-04-27 07:28:21
@article{432188fd-cc88-4e51-9f7f-4e45261bd079,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: Earlier research regarding immigrants has shown that lifestyle and environmental factors are of importance for the risk of developing certain diseases. Food habits are one of these factors. As there is little research concerning immigrants and food habits, the aim of the present paper was to explore food habits operationalised as meal frequency and vegetable intake among a group of older immigrants in Sweden. Specifically, the following questions were explored: changes in food habits when migrating, missing food from the native country, gender differences in food habits and association between food habits and self-rated health and well-being. Method: A total of 131 persons from the health-promoting study “Promoting Aging Migrants’ Capabilities” (PAMC) conducted in Gothenburg, Sweden, 2011–2014, were included in this exploratory secondary analysis of questionnaire data. Participants were 70 years or older, cognitively intact, and living in ordinary housing. They had all migrated to Sweden from Finland or the Western Balkan Region (Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and Serbia). Descriptive statistics as well as binary logistic regression were used to answer the research questions. Results: Forty-eight percent of the participants in PAMC reported that they had changed their food habits when migrating, and 17% considered that they missed certain foods from their native country. Most of the participants migrated to Sweden more than 20 years ago. There was a significant difference in self-rated health in favour of the male participants (p = 0.02), but food habits, operationalised as meal frequency and vegetable intake, were not associated with self-rated health or life satisfaction. Conclusion: Men rated their health as better than women did, but food habits operationalised as meal frequency or vegetable intake, were not associated with self-rated health or life satisfaction. Results from this secondary analysis were affected by methodological shortcomings. Further studies to understand the role of food habits in relation to health in a migration context are desired. Trial registration: NCT01841853, Registered April 29, 2013. Retrospectively registered.</p>}},
  author       = {{Johannesson, Julie and Gustafsson, Susanne and Slinde, Frode and Rothenberg, Elisabet}},
  issn         = {{2352-6181}},
  keywords     = {{Exploratory study; Immigrants; Life satisfaction; Meal frequency; Older adults; Secondary analysis; Self-rated health; Vegetable intake}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Journal of Ethnic Foods}},
  title        = {{Exploring meal frequency and vegetable intake among immigrants 70 years or older in Sweden : Secondary analysis of data from the Promoting Aging Migrants Capabilities study}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s42779-021-00115-2}},
  doi          = {{10.1186/s42779-021-00115-2}},
  volume       = {{8}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}