The Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Nutrition, Health and Environment in Indonesia: A Qualitative Investigation of Perspectives from Multi-Disciplinary Experts
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design and Conceptual Framework
2.2. Description of Research Team
2.3. Location and Recruitment
2.4. In-Depth Interviews Procedures
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
Description of Study Informants
4. Themes
4.1. Theme: COVID-19 Impacts on Awareness about and Adherence to Health Behaviors
“COVID-19, I think the one that I previously mentioned because they concern about increasing immunity. So, for example, household that maybe never, because I noticed also in my family the household that never eat fruits or vegetables, and now they eat it once a day. There is a change like that and they consume vitamin supplement as well and herbal. Herbals like spices.”(44-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“Yes, prior to COVID, they prefer western food and fast food like that but after COVID, because there are so many education in the locations and also in social media, so most people are trying to change their habit and prefer to choose fruit first, before... besides the fatty foods.”(56-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“In the COVID-19 era in the urban people, now, so many exercise activity like small group, for example, riding bike together with friend or jogging together with the kids. One good thing from the COVID-19 is changing the exercise activity, especially for the urban people.”(38-year-old female, a healthcare provider).
“After COVID, I’ve seen lots of people taking up cycling. Even some healthcare practitioners that I work with, they’ve also become more interested in cycling.”(IDQ 18, 22-year-old female, a healthcare provider).
“Exercise habit was decreased. Why exercise has decreased? Our people like to exercise in the public area. Right now, some and many public area was closed because of the COVID.”(54-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“Yes. Because we have phone, they sometimes look for the recommendation from the internet because they have mobile phone like that and it’s easy to get. They can get information easier than before but sometimes because so many organizations or so many people give information, sometimes they get confused where is the right information because so many information, so many recommendation for people, everyone can give recommendation like that.”(36-year-old female, a healthcare provider).
“I think there’s nothing changed with the COVID. I think COVID had huge impact only in a few months after it’s announced. Everything’s getting back to normal”(44-year-old male, an environmental researcher).
“Not changed, I guess [laughs]. Based on my experience, if I talk to my patients, they still buy foods, deep frying food from street vendors, because it already become our habit eating behavior, a habit. So it’s really hard not to buy deep frying foods from street vendors, because here in Indonesia we can find the street vendors everywhere… and… it’s part of our habit.”(33-year-old female, a healthcare provider).
4.2. Theme: COVID-19 Impacts on Family Meal Patterns and Dietary Behaviors
“… in my area I noticed that before COVID-19, maybe every day the restaurants always full. Sometimes pizza or other local food restaurants always full, but now many of them even already closed. It means, it can indicate that people may be tend to eat more frequent at home, or they can order online and then they still eat at home but buying online.”(44-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“I don’t think the habit has really changed much except for, I heard that more people are starting to cook more at home, things like that. For me, since I work in Jakarta full time, I still don’t have time to cook. I usually buy around a place. I don’t do that cooking myself. Lots of people, I heard they start to do more cooking themselves.”(22-year-old female, a healthcare provider).
“With lower income, in my region, there are some jobless people… the government help this people, so the government give like nutrition packet: Supplements, and then some foods and fruits for these people.”(29-year-old male, a healthcare provider).
“what I observe depends very much on the socioeconomic level. Because, you know, it is now quite difficult time from economic points of view, so they will cook, rather than buying.”(69-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“Based on my experience and what I see and what I know, there is not much difference…, because maybe, at the beginning of the COVID-19 they afraid to buy food from outside, from restaurants but I guess it only lasted just, maybe two or three months. But, nowadays, they’re not afraid anymore, … they still buy food from outside, even though they do not eat at the restaurant, they buy the food from the restaurant, or they order, the food from online delivery. So I guess there is not much difference about the food preference.”(33-year-old female, a healthcare provider).
“No, before pandemic we don’t have a food service business, but I think this is a chance, the real chance during pandemic… we can sell foods… with low price, so can we help more people to eat good food… And then send happiness to the people. I think many many families within my area will have specialists or they have cooking abilities, they build this little industry like home industry for food service. This has become the common, the new common situation.”(29-year-old male, a healthcare provider).
“I think it now has a bigger influence because parents prefer kids at home the whole day. They prefer rather than letting kids playing outside. They will open television or other programs from the internet. Of course, it changes and sometimes the kids don’t want to eat their mother’s food because they want to eat that food that they see on the television or the internet, so it happens also.”(38-year-old female, a healthcare provider).
4.3. Theme: COVID-19 Impacts on Availability, Affordability and Access to Healthy Foods
4.4. Sub-Theme: COVID-19 Impacts on Availability of Healthy Foods
“…Yes, in an early pandemic in March 2020 in [name of region] informed this is a pandemic scale so, the food is a lack. Many people panic buying and then many local governments give the local restrictions, we are full lockdown here, so the access of food is really terrible, only food stock from the refrigerator can serve us.”(28-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“Then for those who cannot go outside to get fresh food because they are afraid of going to market because in the beginning, COVID market is the place of transmission, in Indonesia traditional market, especially, so they then use frozen food business that is mushrooming following that situation.”(44-year-old male, an environmental researcher).
“Then it’s getting worse when we have a pandemic, COVID, because the distribution is really limited by our government. It’s make our fishermen, they just catch the fish near the areas, not for miles in open ocean. The fish they catch is more little than as usual.”(40-year-old female, an environmental researcher).
4.5. Sub-Theme: COVID-19 Impacts on Affordability of Health Foods
“…but in low income, especially in pandemic COVID, many people lost their jobs, and then they have little money for consuming a better food. Maybe, they always buy some cheap foods like carbohydrates but meat or protein is expensive, yeah.”(29-year-old male, a healthcare provider).
“Maybe because of the COVID-19 impacted people’s income and people become difficult to buy food, and then the price of food in urban get increase, and then impact their supply from rural also. Rural area may become food insecure because they have to sell. They have to sell off all of their own products.”(44-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“Due to the affordability, I already mentioned that even we have a social safety net or money from the government to support the poor family, but if the market is closed, they cannot access. In order to meet their need or to buy the food they need, they will go to the small retail, in which the price is a little bit higher compared to the open market. It will influence the number of the food or the variety of the food that they afford to buy due to the increased price.”(45-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“After this COVID-19 affected Indonesia, I think all over the world but especially in Indonesia, there’s so many program that cannot do well. Like health Indonesian insurance that have program that I told you before, so many programs cannot that they do because we have to aware about the protocol, we have so many things that we have to prepare to make the meeting. So many program we cannot do that.”(36-year-old female, a healthcare provider).
4.6. Sub-Theme: COVID-19 Impacts on Access to Healthy Foods
“I think, in my observation it doesn’t really change about access…, but what in the market it may a little bit different from before. Like, like now, they, they have like herbal more, but of course more expensive. Like that. But when you talk about access, I think this… that it doesn’t really change a lot, access yeah because, they, they are available, it’s just what you want to buy, so it depends very much … on economic status of the community—higher status gets more access”(69-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“Maybe since COVID, there are so many of them, buy it from online, so they do not have to go to the market so they buy it online. COVID-19 pandemic not really gave impact in food access. People in low-income neighborhood still could access some food items. This pandemic impact on how they could buy it.”(54-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“Well, it’s because it’s getting more expensive I think that because there are so many application that it’s called ‘Petani’. Petani means farmers that offering their product directly to the consumer which is really good so there is no in-between, which usually takes more profit than the farmers. If the farmers get a better price directly from consumer, then it’s good for them than before. COVID is not always negative actually, there is a blessing in disguise in this COVID.”(60-year-old female, a public health nutrition researcher).
“Yes. Of course, yes. Traditional market and supermarket is so high-priced to COVID-19. Now, in my home, we have and seller, vegetable seller. We can order them by WhatsApp, and we can always with vegetable and fruit or anything. We can list, and they will buy to traditional market and send us. For me, it’s better choices. I must not go anywhere, but they can send me anything I need. I think like that.”(36-year-old female, a healthcare provider).
4.7. Theme: COVID-19 Impacts on Marine Pollution
“I have two students conduct this research, the briefly result of ours is during the pandemic, the solid waste increase, but the kind of waste is different with before. Before the pandemic, maybe plastic and organic material is very high concentrate in ocean, but now, the health waste, I mean the medical waste like masks or all of the medical waste is increased in the ocean. I know that medical waste is dangerous.”(45-year-old male, an environmental researcher).
“With additional factors, the medical waste, as well as the hygiene-related waste. And more plastic for sure because of the COVID. We have more plastic. When you have online delivery service, be it for food or other stuff, you need more wrapping. You need more wrapping material, like plastics. As a result, we have more waste than normal.”(59-year-old male, an environmental researcher).
“Because of the COVID-19, most of the budget goes to the health sector. I think it’s very difficult for the government to allocate enough financial support for the waste management and taking care of the marine pollution. It becomes like the number maybe 9 or 10 priority because I think the priority to the health and economic sector.”(45-year-old female, an environmental researcher).
“Then also, the activity for material recovery is restricted or reduced because for example in Indonesia …where woman is picking up and collect plastic and other recyclable material, but during COVID-19, their activity is restricted and some of them is afraid. I believe that polluting is increasing.”(45-year-old male, an environmental researcher).
5. Discussion
Implications for Policy and Directions for Additional Research
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
COVID-19 | Corona Virus Disease 2019 |
DIY | Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta |
IRB | Institutional Review Board |
LSSR | Large-Scale Social Restrictions |
MetS | Metabolic Syndrome |
PA | Physical Activity |
PPE | Personal Protective Equipment |
SARS-CoV-2 | Novel Corona Virus |
SEM | Socio-ecological model |
SES | Socioeconomic Status |
UNDIP | Universitas Diponegoro |
WHO | The World Health Organization |
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Country | Total Population | Confirmed Cases 1 | Total Deaths 2 | Fully Vaccinated (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Philippines | 109,850,251 | 3,699,251 | 60,507 | 64.11 |
Indonesia | 274,061,093 | 6,076,894 | 156,711 | 61.51 |
Singapore | 5,858,949 | 1,397,074 | 1408 | 85.35 |
Malaysia | 32,422,628 | 4,552,359 | 35,745 | 84.09 |
Thailand | 69,833,165 | 4,509,541 | 30,559 | 75.59 |
Vietnam | 97,501,966 | 10,742,234 | 43,084 | 81.97 |
Myanmar | 54,478,228 | NA | NA | NA |
Cambodia | 16,761,610 | 136,262 | 3056 | 85.78 |
Brunei | 438,259 | 159,591 | 225 | 97.55 |
Laos | 7,294,985 | 210,233 | 757 | 69.78 |
Timor-Leste | 1,445,006 | 22,949 | 133 | NA |
Icebreaker Question: If you could eat only one food for the rest of your life, what would it be? And what is it about this food that you like? (Or, “What is your preferred main-meal time: breakfast, lunch, dinner and why?) Section 1: Individual-level Factors
In this section, I’ll ask about availability, access, and affordability of foods that are generally considered healthy.
Now we will discuss about the issue of environmental pollution and its impact on the quality and availability of fish and other healthy foods in Indonesia
|
Total (n = 27) | Nutrition/Public Health Researcher (n = 10) | Healthcare Provider (n = 8) | Environmental Researcher (n = 9) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Age (Year) mean, (SD) | 46.1 (11.9) | 48.5 (12.1) | 38.7 (14.1) | 49.3 (7.7) |
Female n, (%) | 19 (70.4) | 9 (90.0) | 7 (87.5) | 3 (33.3) |
Ethnicity n, (%) | ||||
Javanese | 14 (51.9) | 6 (60) | 2 (25.0) | 6 (66.7) |
Sundanese | 2 (7.4) | 2 (20) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
Batak | 2 (7.4) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (25.0) | 0 (0.0) |
Buginese | 2 (7.4) | 1 (10.0) | 1 (12.5) | 0 (0.0) |
Sulawesi | 2 (7.4) | 1 (10.0) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (11.1) |
Lampungenese | 1 (3.7) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (12.5) | 0 (0.0) |
Chinese-Indonesian | 1(3.7) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (11.1) |
Other | 3(11.1) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (25.0) | 1 (11.1) |
Highest level of education n, (%) | ||||
Bachelor’s Degree | 3 (11.1) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (25.0) | 1 (11.1) |
Masters’ Degree | 5 (18.5) | 2 (20.0) | 0 (0.0) | 3 (33.3) |
Medical Practitioner/Clinical Nutritionist | 6 (22.2) | 0 (0.0) | 6 (75.0) | 0 (0.0) |
Doctoral Degree (Ph.D.) | 13 (48.2) | 8(80.0) | 0 (0.0) | 5(55.6) |
Years of Work Experience n, (%) | ||||
Less than 5 years | 6 (22.2) | 1(10.0) | 4 (50.0) | 1(11.1) |
5 to 10 years | 3 (11.1) | 1 (10.0) | 2 (25.0) | 0 (0.0) |
11 to 20 years | 9 (33.3) | 4 (40.0) | 1 (12.5) | 4 (44.4) |
More than 20 years | 9 (33.3) | 4 (40.0) | 1 (12.5) | 4 (44.4) |
Socio-Ecological Framework Level | Theme/Sub-Theme | Key Findings |
---|---|---|
Individual | COVID-19 impacts on awareness about and adherence to health behaviors |
|
Family/Interpersonal | COVID-19 impacts on family meal patterns and dietary behaviors |
|
Community/Regional | COVID-19 impacts on availability, affordability and access to healthy foods:
|
|
COVID-19 impacts on availability, affordability and access to healthy foods:
|
| |
COVID-19 impacts on availability, affordability and access to healthy foods:
|
| |
Environmental | COVID-19 impacts on marine pollution |
|
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Share and Cite
Anyanwu, O.A.; Naumova, E.N.; Chomitz, V.R.; Zhang, F.F.; Chui, K.; Kartasurya, M.I.; Folta, S.C. The Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Nutrition, Health and Environment in Indonesia: A Qualitative Investigation of Perspectives from Multi-Disciplinary Experts. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 11575. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811575
Anyanwu OA, Naumova EN, Chomitz VR, Zhang FF, Chui K, Kartasurya MI, Folta SC. The Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Nutrition, Health and Environment in Indonesia: A Qualitative Investigation of Perspectives from Multi-Disciplinary Experts. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(18):11575. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811575
Chicago/Turabian StyleAnyanwu, Oyedolapo A., Elena N. Naumova, Virginia R. Chomitz, Fang Fang Zhang, Kenneth Chui, Martha I. Kartasurya, and Sara C. Folta. 2022. "The Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Nutrition, Health and Environment in Indonesia: A Qualitative Investigation of Perspectives from Multi-Disciplinary Experts" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 18: 11575. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811575
APA StyleAnyanwu, O. A., Naumova, E. N., Chomitz, V. R., Zhang, F. F., Chui, K., Kartasurya, M. I., & Folta, S. C. (2022). The Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Nutrition, Health and Environment in Indonesia: A Qualitative Investigation of Perspectives from Multi-Disciplinary Experts. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(18), 11575. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811575