Tradition, taste and taboo: the gastroecology of maternal perinatal diet.

IF 3.3 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health Pub Date : 2021-07-05 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1136/bmjnph-2021-000252
Hannah G Lunkenheimer, Oskar Burger, Santosh Akhauri, Indrajit Chaudhuri, Lisa Dibbell, Faiz A Hashmi, Tracy Johnson, Emily E Little, Sudipta Mondal, Nachiket Mor, Neela Saldanha, Janine Schooley, Cristine H Legare
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Maternal malnutrition is a major source of regional health inequity and contributes to maternal and infant morbidity and mortality. Bihar, a state in eastern India adjacent to Jharkhand and West Bengal, has relatively high neonatal mortality rates because a large portion of infants are born to young mothers. Bihar has the second-highest proportion of underweight children under 3 in India, with infant mortality rates of 48 per 1000 live births. Maternal malnutrition remains a major threat to perinatal health in Bihar, where 58.3% of pregnant women are anaemic.

Methods: We examined dietary beliefs and practices among mothers, mothers-in-law and community members, including Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs), using focus group discussions (n=40 groups, 213 participants), key informant interviews (n=50 participants) and quantitative surveys (n=1200 recent mothers and 400 community health workers). We report foods that are added/avoided during the perinatal period, along with stated reasons underlying food choice. We summarise the content of the diet based on responses to the quantitative survey and identify influencers of food choice and stated explanations for adding and avoiding foods.

Key findings: Analyses for all methodologies included gathering frequency counts and running descriptive statistics by food item, recommendation to eat or avoid, pregnancy or post partum, food group and health promoting or risk avoiding. During pregnancy, commonly added foods were generally nutritious (milk, pulses) with explanations for consuming these foods related to promoting health. Commonly avoided foods during pregnancy were also nutritious (wood apples, eggplant) with explanations for avoiding these foods related to miscarriage, newborn appearance and issues with digestion. Post partum, commonly added foods included sweets because they ease digestion whereas commonly avoided foods included eggplants and oily or spicy foods. Family, friends, relatives or neighbours influenced food choice for both mothers and ASHAs more than ASHAs and other health workers.Perinatal dietary beliefs and behaviours are shaped by local gastroecologies or systems of knowledge and practice that surround and inform dietary choices, as well as how those choices are explained and influenced. Our data provide novel insight into how health influencers operating within traditional and biomedical health systems shape the perinatal dietary beliefs of both mothers and community health workers.

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传统、口味和禁忌:产妇围产期饮食的胃生态学。
背景:孕产妇营养不良是造成地区健康不平等的主要原因,也是导致孕产妇和婴儿发病和死亡的原因之一。比哈尔邦位于印度东部,毗邻恰尔肯德邦(Jharkhand)和西孟加拉邦(West Bengal),由于大部分婴儿由年轻母亲所生,因此新生儿死亡率相对较高。比哈尔邦 3 岁以下体重不足儿童的比例在印度位居第二,婴儿死亡率为每 1000 例活产死亡 48 例。在比哈尔邦,58.3% 的孕妇患有贫血症,产妇营养不良仍然是围产期健康的主要威胁:我们通过焦点小组讨论(40 个小组,213 名参与者)、关键信息提供者访谈(50 名参与者)和定量调查(1200 名新手母亲和 400 名社区保健工作者),研究了母亲、婆婆和社区成员(包括经认可的社会保健积极分子(ASHA))的饮食观念和做法。我们报告了围产期添加/避免食用的食物,并说明了选择食物的原因。我们根据定量调查的反馈总结了膳食内容,并确定了影响食物选择的因素以及添加和避免食物的原因:对所有方法的分析包括收集频率计数,并按食物项目、建议食用或避免食用、孕期或产后、食物类别、促进健康或避免风险进行描述性统计。在怀孕期间,常见的添加食物一般都是营养丰富的食物(牛奶、豆类),食用这些食物的原因与促进健康有关。孕期避免食用的常见食物也是营养丰富的食物(木苹果、茄子),避免食用这些食物的原因与流产、新生儿外观和消化问题有关。产后常添加的食物包括甜食,因为它们容易消化,而常避免的食物包括茄子、油腻或辛辣食物。家人、朋友、亲戚或邻居对母亲和助理助产士(ASHA)食物选择的影响要大于助理助产士(ASHA)和其他卫生工作者。围产期饮食信仰和行为受当地胃生态或知识和实践体系的影响,这些知识和实践体系围绕着饮食选择并为其提供信息,同时也影响着如何解释和影响这些选择。我们的数据为我们提供了新的视角,让我们了解在传统和生物医学健康体系中运作的健康影响者是如何塑造母亲和社区健康工作者的围产期饮食观念的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health Nursing-Nutrition and Dietetics
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
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