Sociocultural Influences on Dietary Practices and Physical Activity Behaviors of Rural Adolescents—A Qualitative Exploration
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Conceptual Framework
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Data Collection
- Foods, snacks and drinks commonly consumed by adolescents in Matlab;
- Any gender-based difference in dietary preferences and physical activity behaviors;
- Link between foods, physical activity and health;
- Adolescents’ idea about a healthy and desirable physique or body size;
- Physical activities and sports that the teenagers in Matlab engage with;
- Adolescents’ perception of health benefits from physical activities.
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethics Statement
3. Results
3.1. Adolescents’ Taste-Driven Food Choice Reigns Supreme
3.1.1. Mothers Succumbing to Adolescents’ Food Choices
“If they are asked to eat vegetables, they would deny and ask for meat... We (the parents and other older members of the family) find broth prepared with papaya or ash gourd (green pumpkin) tasty, but they would never like that. They like bhuna (a very oily curry cooked by oil-roasting spices and later adding water as a moistening agent)-whether its boiled egg bhuna or meat bhuna. We adults don’t mind consuming vegetables.”(Mother, FGD 1)
“Although I know vegetables keep the body healthy and boost our blood, I don’t eat them...... I don’t like them at all, I just can’t eat vegetables.”(Adolescent girl, FGD 1)
“Although the outside foods are worse than those prepared at home, they taste better and there are food items that can’t be made at home.”(Adolescent boy, FGD 1)
3.1.2. Snacks and Street Foods Attract Adolescents More
“For me, nothing is as good as foods prepared at home. Outside foods are always bad. But do the kids understand this! If I try to make her (participant’s daughter) understand today, the very next day, she would eat those in the school. I advise her not to eat those outside foods. She has a problem with dyspepsia. I tell her [that] I would make you noodles at home, you could eat that before going to school and take that as tiffin with you. Even then she asks for 10–15 taka to buy jhalmuri (an oily mix of puffed rice, green chili, sliced onion, mustard oil, and an assortment of spices), which is also not good, very oily.”(Mother, FGD 1)
“My eating pattern is kind of similar to him. Usually, it’s either roti or rice in the morning, I eat rice three times a day. In between the main meals I have snacks, and these are usually oil-fried foods... [like] shingara, samosa, lentil fritters...... these we buy in the afternoon when we go out to roam around.”(Adolescent boy, FGD 2)
“Because of gastric (local layman expression for dyspepsia, abdominal bloating, fullness, belching and discomfort) many of the adult people don’t eat oil-fried foods; but we love those very much; so, there are differences in food choice.”(Adolescent boy, FGD 2)
3.1.3. Seasonal Variation in Access to Home-Grown Fruits
“The fruits that are from the trees at home-mango, litchi-we can’t buy [these from the market], but the kids can eat from the trees. It’s not always possible for us to buy fruit. But we don’t sell the fruits grown at home, we keep that for the children, we tell them to eat as much as they can, also there is guava. It’s now the season for mango, they even eat ten mangoes a day!”(Mother, FGD 1)
“Now this is the season for mango and [other] summer fruits here, we eat fruits quite a lot during this time of the year. After the season, we get to eat fruits rarely; … these need to be bought from the market and often are costly.”(Adolescent girl, FGD 2)
3.2. High Knowledge of Hygiene and Food Safety Not Evident in Adolescents’ Actual Dietary Practice
“These [foods] are sold by the vendors in the market, not even covered properly; so, there must be dirt and dust, germs, and god knows what else! They cut the ingredients without washing, [they] don’t even wash their hands before preparing those foods.”(Adolescent girl, FGD 2)
“We often get to watch and listen to news about this issue (chemicals in fruits) in the television. What can we do? Many of the fruits are not grown in our locality, for example, mango grows here in our yards and we don’t have to buy mango from market. But, when it comes to litchi, a fruit that the kids like, we buy it from market, even though we know it contains medicine and that we give to the kids and eat ourselves.”(Mother, FGD 2)
“Foods are prepared at home with care. The outside foods are prepared without care or attention to hygiene … I eat [those] but not frequently. What can we do! We just have to [eat outside foods]!”(Adolescent boy, FGD 1)
“... egg, milk, meat, fruits like apple, orange... If we can get these for the kids, they will get nutrition, they will have energy in their body, the brain will work better. But, you see, we need to have money for these. So, the kids actually eat whatever we can afford.”(Mother, FGD 2)
“Shaak, however, is nutritious; although many people use to think this is just ordinary shaak. But it contains vitamins and vitamins are good. To me, shaak is even better than meat. Here in the villages, if you just go out or just look across the yard you can get shaak and let the kids eat that, although we don’t do this out of laziness. We think it would do good, only if we can give them meat and fish.”(Mother, FGD 2)
3.3. Peer Influence in the Context of a Poor-Quality Food Environment Dictating Adolescents’ Food Choices
3.3.1. Bonding over Street Food
“It is different when we are with our friends and we have lot of fun eating these together, buying from the vendors. It actually is a part of our time that we spend together.”(Adolescent girl, FGD 1)
“After finishing the school I don’t usually stay at home, I go out with friends, take a walk with them; we have puri, shingara, moglai, sandwich-whatever is available and sold in the shops by the street.”(Adolescent boy, FGD 1)
3.3.2. Avoiding Home-Made Food Owing to Peer Pressure
“They feel shy. My son says, nobody brings food to school; how could I do that? They (classmates) stare at me. Initially, my son used to take noodles or roti with fried egg from home. Now he doesn’t, because his classmates don’t bring tiffin. He wants pocket money, so that he can buy those (foods sold by vendors) during break.”(Mother, FGD 2)
3.3.3. Poor-Quality Food Environment Surrounding the School Limits Adolescents’ Food Choices
“These are sold by the vendors near the school premise and we are with our friends when we are in the school, so it’s an easy option.”(Adolescent girl, FGD 1)
3.4. Construction of Gender in a Rural Context Matters
3.4.1. Prevailing Gendered Pattern of Consumption and Physical Activity Behavior
“These (energy drinks) are cold drinks, it feels great to drink these during the hot and humid days...... [I drink] to gain energy and to become strong... our friends drink these all the time; so do we. The taste is a bit different, you know!”(Adolescent boy, FGD 1)
“To become healthy, I eat a lot, but in vain. [By healthy I understand] the body should be free from diseases and appear strong and robust-that’s it... ...... I am eating all types of food, yet my body... I mean, I am not gaining weight... being healthy means gaining weight and getting taller.”(Adolescent boy, FGD 1)
“I think, regarding the body size, healthy girls are of medium built, not too fat, not too slim.”(Adolescent girl, FGD 1)
“The (adolescent) boys do manually heavier work and those that require one to be outdoors ... Manually heavy work, such as carrying sacks of paddy or parts of irrigating machine, and cutting trees, plucking something from trees- these, we are not able to do. The boys deal with these.”(Adolescent girl, FGD 2)
“These (bouchi, kutkut) are girls’ sports, we don’t play these... ...... the girls usually are seen playing these games, they don’t play cricket, we don’t play their games.”(Adolescent boy, FGD 1)
“I think, it’s not about the strength; my mother says, it doesn’t look good that girls are doing a lot of running and jumping out in the open; I mean, it has never been a thing appreciated in this society.”(Adolescent girl, FGD 2)
3.4.2. Rigidity of Existing Gender Norms Impacting Physical Activity Behavior
“Everybody in this locality disapproves of girls riding bicycle openly. Our relatives like uncles and other older people object, they say- girls riding bicycle in public- does that look good?”(Adolescent girl, FGD 2)
“In the villages, if a girl rides bicycle, she becomes a topic of gossip and harsh criticism. It’s OK if the boys ride bicycle, but if a girl does so, words and rumors start spreading!”(Mother, FGD 1)
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Data Extract | Code | Theme |
---|---|---|
“Yes, the girls do the cooking, they can tidy the house up, they learn various household chores. The boys stay outdoors, they go and play in the fields.” (Mother, FGD 1) | Internalized gender roles | Construction of gender in a rural context matters. |
“After finishing school, I don’t usually stay at home, I go out with friends, take a walk with them; we have puri, shingara, mughlai paratha, sandwich-whatever is available and sold in the shops by the street.” (Adolescent boy, FGD 1) | Street food as a part of socializing with friends. | Peer influence in the context of a poor-quality food environment dictating adolescents’ food choices. |
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Islam, M.R.; Trenholm, J.; Rahman, A.; Pervin, J.; Ekström, E.-C.; Rahman, S.M. Sociocultural Influences on Dietary Practices and Physical Activity Behaviors of Rural Adolescents—A Qualitative Exploration. Nutrients 2019, 11, 2916. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11122916
Islam MR, Trenholm J, Rahman A, Pervin J, Ekström E-C, Rahman SM. Sociocultural Influences on Dietary Practices and Physical Activity Behaviors of Rural Adolescents—A Qualitative Exploration. Nutrients. 2019; 11(12):2916. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11122916
Chicago/Turabian StyleIslam, Mohammad Redwanul, Jill Trenholm, Anisur Rahman, Jesmin Pervin, Eva-Charlotte Ekström, and Syed Moshfiqur Rahman. 2019. "Sociocultural Influences on Dietary Practices and Physical Activity Behaviors of Rural Adolescents—A Qualitative Exploration" Nutrients 11, no. 12: 2916. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11122916
APA StyleIslam, M. R., Trenholm, J., Rahman, A., Pervin, J., Ekström, E. -C., & Rahman, S. M. (2019). Sociocultural Influences on Dietary Practices and Physical Activity Behaviors of Rural Adolescents—A Qualitative Exploration. Nutrients, 11(12), 2916. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11122916