考察城市土著成年人对拟议的加糖饮料税的态度:一项使用非殖民化视角的定性研究。

CMAJ open Pub Date : 2023-10-10 Print Date: 2023-09-01 DOI:10.9778/cmajo.20230025
Maria Kisselgoff, Michael Redhead Champagne, Riel Dubois, Lorna Turnbull, Jeff LaPlante, Annette Schultz, Andrea Bombak, Natalie Riediger
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:加糖饮料税已被提议作为一项减少消费的公共卫生政策,与加拿大其他种族或种族化群体相比,非保护区原住民消费加糖饮料的频率和数量更高。我们试图探索居住在加拿大市中心社区的土著成年人对含糖饮料征税的可接受性和预期结果。方法:采用基于社区的参与性研究方法,我们使用目的性抽样对城市土著成年人进行了半结构访谈(2019年11月至2020年8月)。访谈是录音的,逐字逐句转录,并使用理论专题分析进行分析。结果:所有20名参与者(10名女性,8名男性和2名二酒精)在面试时或在生活中的某个时刻每天定期饮用含糖饮料。大多数与会者反对并关注加糖饮料税的前景,因为有三个相互关联的主题:政府不可信,税收无效并导致不公平的结果,土著自决至关重要。与会者讨论了政府对以前税收的管理不善以及缺乏对社区具体需求的优先考虑。大多数参与者预计,他们社区的土著人将继续消费含糖饮料,但征税将导致用于其他必需品的资源减少,包括被视为健康的食品。解释:城市土著人民对该税的支持率低的特点是对该税、政策制定者及其有效性的不信任。调查结果强调了自决在为公平和不歧视的卫生政策提供信息方面的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Examining attitudes toward a proposed sugar-sweetened beverage tax among urban Indigenous adults: a qualitative study using a decolonizing lens.

Background: Sugar-sweetened beverage taxation has been proposed as a public health policy to reduce consumption, and compared with other ethnic or racialized groups in Canada, off-reserve Indigenous populations consume sugar-sweetened beverages at higher frequencies and quantities. We sought to explore the acceptability and anticipated outcomes of a tax on sugar-sweetened beverages among Indigenous adults residing in an inner-city Canadian neighbourhood.

Methods: Using a community-based participatory research approach, we conducted semistructured interviews (November 2019-August 2020) with urban Indigenous adults using purposive sampling. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim and analyzed using theoretical thematic analysis.

Results: All 20 participants (10 female, 8 male and 2 two-spirit) consumed sugar-sweetened beverages on a regular, daily basis at the time of the interview or at some point in their lives. Most participants were opposed to and concerned about the prospect of sugar-sweetened beverage taxation owing to 3 interconnected themes: government is not trustworthy, taxes are ineffective and lead to inequitable outcomes, and Indigenous self-determination is critical. Participants discussed government's mismanagement of previous taxes and lack of prioritization of their community's specific needs. Most participants anticipated that Indigenous people in their community would continue to consume sugar-sweetened beverages, but that a tax would result in fewer resources for other necessities, including foods deemed healthy.

Interpretation: Low support for the tax among urban Indigenous people is characterized by distrust regarding the tax, policy-makers and its perceived effectiveness. Findings underscore the importance of self-determination in informing health policies that are equitable and nonstigmatizing.

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