健康促进计划和健康生活方式:第一代非洲黑人男性的观点。

M. Asare
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METHODS Convenient sample and snowball methods were used to recruit 50 (mean age=38 years) first generation black African males to participate in an one hour long face-to-face interview. Fifteen semi-structured open ended questions were used but there were other follow-up questions. The interview data were descriptively analyzed to find trends. RESULTS The study reveals obesity and overweight problem among the participants. However, most of the participants; lead sedentary behavior, engage in poor eating habit, and do not access routine physical checkups. More than half (n=28) of the participants reported that they do not do exercise or engage in physical activities because of: lack of time, laziness, lack of discipline, and lack of understanding of the importance of physical activities. Some of the participants also indicated that having a physical activity regimen is foreign to their African culture. 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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:在美国,黑人男性比其他种族更容易患心脏病、二型糖尿病、高血压和其他慢性疾病,这是有据可查的。同样不可否认的事实是,体育锻炼、健康的饮食习惯和定期体检可以帮助预防或控制一些慢性疾病。然而,人们对美国非洲黑人男性的身体活动、营养和健康筛查行为知之甚少。因此,本研究的主要目的是确定第一代非洲黑人男性对健康生活方式和预防保健的看法、信念和态度,以及在文化上适当的方式来促进他们的健康促进计划。方法采用简便抽样法和滚雪球法,对50名非洲第一代黑人男性(平均年龄38岁)进行1小时的面对面访谈。使用了15个半结构化开放式问题,但还有其他后续问题。对访谈数据进行描述性分析以发现趋势。结果研究揭示了参与者中存在的肥胖和超重问题。然而,大多数参与者;导致久坐不动的行为,不良的饮食习惯,不进行常规的身体检查。超过一半(n=28)的参与者报告说,他们不做运动或从事体育活动的原因是:缺乏时间,懒惰,缺乏纪律,以及缺乏对体育活动重要性的理解。一些参与者还表示,进行体育锻炼对他们的非洲文化来说是陌生的。大多数受访者表示,他们的饮食不均衡,每日摄入的食物大多含有过多的碳水化合物。此外,他们几乎每天都吃类似的食物,不吃饭,导致在不规律的吃饭时间吃大量的食物。在获得常规健康检查行为方面,大多数受访者表示对医疗保健系统缺乏信任,害怕了解自己的健康状况,缺乏健康保险是阻止他们获得常规健康检查的一些原因。结论以第一代非洲黑人男性文化为基础的健康生活方式促进计划,与“一刀切”的方法相比,更有可能对这一目标人群产生更大的影响。
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Health Promotion Programs and Healthy Lifestyle: First Generation African Black Males' Perspectives.
BACKGROUND It is well documented that black males are more likely to suffer from heart disease, type II diabetes, hypertension, and other chronic diseases than any other racial group in the United States. It is also undeniable fact that physical activity, healthy eating behavior, and accessing routine medical checkups can help prevent or control some of those chronic diseases. However, little is known about black African males' physical activity, nutritional and health screening behaviors in the US. Therefore, the main purpose of this study was to determine the first generation black African males' perceptions, beliefs and attitudes about healthy lifestyle and preventive care and culturally appropriate way to promote health promotion programs among them. METHODS Convenient sample and snowball methods were used to recruit 50 (mean age=38 years) first generation black African males to participate in an one hour long face-to-face interview. Fifteen semi-structured open ended questions were used but there were other follow-up questions. The interview data were descriptively analyzed to find trends. RESULTS The study reveals obesity and overweight problem among the participants. However, most of the participants; lead sedentary behavior, engage in poor eating habit, and do not access routine physical checkups. More than half (n=28) of the participants reported that they do not do exercise or engage in physical activities because of: lack of time, laziness, lack of discipline, and lack of understanding of the importance of physical activities. Some of the participants also indicated that having a physical activity regimen is foreign to their African culture. Most of the respondents reported that they do not eat balanced diet regularly and most of their daily food intake contains too much carbohydrate. In addition, they eat similar food almost every day, skip meals which results in eating large portion size at irregular eating time. On accessing routine health screening behaviors, most respondents stated lack of trust in the healthcare system, the fear of knowing their health status, lack of health insurance were some of the reasons that prevent them from accessing regular health screening. CONCLUSION Healthy lifestyle promotion programs which are based on the culture of first generation black African males stand a better chance of having a greater impact on this targeted population as opposed to a "one-size-fits-all" approach.
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