A Case Study on the Dietary Shifts in an Older Tongan Migrant to the United States.

Q4 Medicine
Victor Kaufusi
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Abstract

This case study, anchored in the Social Ecological Model (SEM), delves into the dietary behaviors of a 67-year-old first-generation Tongan woman in Utah. It uncovers pivotal themes through narrative and thematic analysis: cultural identity, economic constraints, environmental adaptation, and health perceptions. The study underscores the importance of cultural preservation, economic stability, and the centrality of traditional Tongan foods, revealing a complex interplay between cultural adaptation and health awareness. Community support and engagement emerged as crucial in sustaining healthy dietary practices amid cultural changes. The study advocates for an SEM-based framework to guide future research and develop culturally sensitive interventions to improve dietary behaviors among first-generation Tongan immigrants and similar groups and offers valuable insights. The limited generalizability of this study due to its single-case design necessitates future investigations to incorporate broader and more diverse samples to validate the findings and tailor more precise interventions.

关于一位移居美国的汤加老人饮食习惯转变的个案研究。
本案例研究以社会生态模型(SEM)为基础,深入研究了犹他州一位 67 岁的第一代汤加妇女的饮食行为。它通过叙述和主题分析,揭示了以下关键主题:文化认同、经济限制、环境适应和健康观念。研究强调了文化保护、经济稳定和汤加传统食物中心地位的重要性,揭示了文化适应和健康意识之间复杂的相互作用。社区的支持和参与对于在文化变革中保持健康的饮食习惯至关重要。这项研究提倡采用基于 SEM 的框架来指导未来的研究,并制定对文化敏感的干预措施,以改善第一代汤加移民和类似群体的饮食行为,并提供了宝贵的见解。由于本研究采用的是单例设计,其推广性有限,因此今后的调查需要纳入更广泛、更多样的样本,以验证研究结果,并定制更精确的干预措施。
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CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
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