TY - JOUR
T1 - Food-related environmental, behavioral, and personal factors associated with body mass index among urban, low-income African-American, American Indian, and Caucasian women
AU - Dammann, Kristen Wiig
AU - Smith, Chery
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Purpose. To examine racial/ethnic differences in relationships between food-related environmental, behavioral and personal factors and low-income women's weight status using Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) as a framework. Design. Cross-sectional survey. Setting. Community sites and low-income housing developments in the Twin Cities metropolitan area. Subjects. Low-income African-American, American Indian, and Caucasian women §18 years old (n = 367). Measures. Participants completed a survey including demographic, food security, and theoretically based questions. Heights and weights were measured to determine body mass index (BMI). Analysis. Data were split by race/ethnicity and reduced by examining Pearson coefficients for SCT survey questions significantly correlated with BMI (p < .05). Separate environmental, behavioral, and personal multiple linear regression models for each racial/ethnic group were run to explore the proportion of variance in BMI explained by each SCT construct and which questions were significant predictors. Results. All regression models were statistically significant, although the personal regression models predicted the greatest proportion of the variance in BMI for African-American (15% of the variance), American Indian (22% of the variance), and Caucasian women (37% of the variance). Conclusion. Effective nutrition education and intervention efforts to control the obesity epidemic among urban, low-income women may call for a tailored approach with noted consideration of their racial/ethnic identity. Although broader changes to the food environment are necessary, the importance of addressing personal factors such as nutrition knowledge, self-efficacy, and emotional coping responses to stress, in the context of income constraints, food insecurity, and health beliefs, is also implicated.
AB - Purpose. To examine racial/ethnic differences in relationships between food-related environmental, behavioral and personal factors and low-income women's weight status using Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) as a framework. Design. Cross-sectional survey. Setting. Community sites and low-income housing developments in the Twin Cities metropolitan area. Subjects. Low-income African-American, American Indian, and Caucasian women §18 years old (n = 367). Measures. Participants completed a survey including demographic, food security, and theoretically based questions. Heights and weights were measured to determine body mass index (BMI). Analysis. Data were split by race/ethnicity and reduced by examining Pearson coefficients for SCT survey questions significantly correlated with BMI (p < .05). Separate environmental, behavioral, and personal multiple linear regression models for each racial/ethnic group were run to explore the proportion of variance in BMI explained by each SCT construct and which questions were significant predictors. Results. All regression models were statistically significant, although the personal regression models predicted the greatest proportion of the variance in BMI for African-American (15% of the variance), American Indian (22% of the variance), and Caucasian women (37% of the variance). Conclusion. Effective nutrition education and intervention efforts to control the obesity epidemic among urban, low-income women may call for a tailored approach with noted consideration of their racial/ethnic identity. Although broader changes to the food environment are necessary, the importance of addressing personal factors such as nutrition knowledge, self-efficacy, and emotional coping responses to stress, in the context of income constraints, food insecurity, and health beliefs, is also implicated.
KW - Food Choice
KW - Food Insecurity
KW - Low-Income Women
KW - Obesity
KW - Prevention Research
KW - Social Cognitive Theory
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U2 - 10.4278/ajhp.091222-QUAN-397
DO - 10.4278/ajhp.091222-QUAN-397
M3 - Review article
C2 - 21721954
AN - SCOPUS:80052321293
SN - 0890-1171
VL - 25
SP - E1-E10
JO - American Journal of Health Promotion
JF - American Journal of Health Promotion
IS - 6
ER -