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Towards understanding the new food environment for refugees from the Horn of Africa in Australia.

Wilson A, Renzaho AM, McCabe M, Swinburn B

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  • Journal Health & place

  • Published 20 Jun 2010

  • Volume 16

  • ISSUE 5

  • Pagination 969-76

  • DOI 10.1016/j.healthplace.2010.06.001

Abstract

The study explored how African migrant communities living in North-West Melbourne, Australia, conceptualise and interpret the Australian food system from an intergenerational perspective and how this impacts on their attitudes and beliefs about food in Australia. Using a qualitative approach that involved 15 adolescents and 25 parents, the study found significant intergenerational differences in four themes that characterised their new food environment: (1) an abundance of cheap and readily available processed and packaged foods, (2) nutrition messages that are complex to gauge due to poor literacy levels, (3) promotion of a slim body size, which contradicts pre-existing cultural values surrounding body shapes and (4) Australian food perceived as being full of harmful chemicals. In order to develop effective culturally competent obesity prevention interventions in this sub-population, a multigenerational approach is needed.