Using Group Model Building to Describe the System Driving Unhealthy Eating and Identify Intervention Points: A Participatory, Stakeholder Engagement Approach in the Caribbean
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Settings
2.2. Ethical Approval
2.3. Interviews and Stakeholder Selection
2.4. The Group Model Building Workshops
2.5. Identifying Places to Intervene
3. Results
3.1. Drivers of Unhealthy Eating
3.2. Balance of Local/Imported Food Supply
3.3. Gender, Social, Cultural Drivers of Consumption
3.4. Community Engagement
3.5. Government and Policy Coordination
3.6. Assessing Interventions in the System
3.7. Improve Knowledge and Skills for Healthy Eating
3.8. Promote Healthy Eating Environments in Schools
3.9. Coordinate Policy and Fiscal Interventions for Healthy Eating
3.10. Reduce Access to and Promotion of Unhealthy Foods
3.11. Strengthen Local Agriculture
4. Discussion
4.1. Stakeholder Engagement and Perspectives on the Model Building Process
4.2. Principal Findings
4.3. Pathways and Feedbacks to Unhealthy Eating: Aligning with the Global Action Programme
4.3.1. Objective 1: Enabling Environments for Food Security
4.3.2. Objective 2: Sustainable, Resilient, and Nutrition-Sensitive Food Systems That Include the Management and Use of Oceans, Freshwater Resources, and Terrestrial Sources Relying on Local Crops, Sustainable Agricultural Practices, and Efficient Value Chains
4.3.3. Objective 3: Empowered People and Communities for Food Security and Nutrition
4.4. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Area to intervene | Votes |
---|---|
Price of unhealthy foods, amount of imported unhealthy foods; access to those foods; advertising | 11 |
Lack of knowledge and information; translation of research findings into practice; technical capacity for sustainable agriculture | 9 |
Local food supply | 7 |
Production of healthy foods and local production | 6 |
Household food preparation | 5 |
Social drivers and consequences | 5 |
The choices people make to eat an unhealthy diet | 3 |
Area for intervention | Key stakeholders |
---|---|
Strengthening knowledge, skills, and practice for healthy eating | Government; community champions of healthy eating (including nutritionists; Rastafarians and other religious leaders; educators); community members; consumer groups |
Promoting healthy eating environments in schools | Government; schools and their staff; children; parents and caregivers; vendors; parent-teacher associations |
Actions at the community level | Community leaders; local food retailers and distributors (including restaurants, supermarkets, markets); farmers and those engaged in backyard gardening; women’s and men’s groups |
Tax and fiscal measures | Government; civil society; consumers |
Limit the influence of unhealthy foods | Government; food distributors and retailers; agricultural sector |
Strengthen local agriculture | Government; agricultural sector; tourism; community leaders |
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Country | Prevalence of Stunting in Children under 5 (%) | Child and Adolescent Underweight (5–19 Years) (%) (F/M) | Child and Adolescent Overweight (5–19 Years) (%) (F/M) | Adult Overweight (%) (F/M) | Anemia in Women of Reproductive Age (15–49 Years) (%) | NCD Deaths Occurring under 70 Years (%) * |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jamaica | 7 | 14.4/14.9 | 30.4/29.2 | 63.2/47.4 | 22.5 | 31 |
St Kitts and Nevis | No data | 16.2/17.3 | 28.1/27.8 | 59.3/45 | No data | No data |
St Vincent and the Grenadines | No data | 16.1/16.7 | 29.2/28.9 | 61.1/48.9 | 24.5 | 44 |
Country | Government | Private Sector | Civil Society | Regional Agencies |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jamaica | Agriculture, industry and commerce n = 4 | Restaurant n = 1; Food distributors n = 2; Export and trade n = 1 | Vendors association n = 2; Market and vendors unions n = 3; Food production n = 1; Religious n = 2 | |
St Kitts and Nevis | Agriculture n = 1; Health and gender n = 6; Education n = 1; Foreign affairs n = 1 | Agriculture n = 2 | Religious n = 1; Agriculture and food retailers n = 2; civil society n = 2 | Agriculture n = 2; Health n = 1 |
St Vincent and the Grenadines | Health n = 1; Foreign affairs and trade n = 1 | Restaurant n = 1; Export and trade n = 1 | Religious n = 1; Agriculture and food production n = 1 |
Area of Intervention | Leverage Points | Key Stakeholders | Intervention Examples |
---|---|---|---|
Improve knowledge and skills for healthy eating | Translate research findings into policy and practice; Promote healthy eating skills in communities; Promote sustainable agriculture; Connect communities to agriculture | Agricultural sector; Education; Government; Academia; Communications and media | Training on food preparation for households; Training on sustainable best practice for agriculture; Promote local agriculture through media campaigns |
Promote health eating environments in schools | Limit unhealthy foods in schools; Promote child-friendly education on healthy eating; Create networks between school community and agriculture | Community leaders; Civil society; Education | Farm-to-school schemes for including local products; Engaging food vendors on healthy options; Policies limiting unhealthy food in schools |
Coordinate policy and fiscal interventions for healthy eating | Coordinate policies across sectors; Engage in public-private partnerships; Earmark taxes on unhealthy foods for promoting agriculture and treatment of NCDs | Government; Agricultural sector | Establish and maintain networks across government sectors; Creation of regional coordinating bodies |
Reduce access to and promotion of unhealthy foods | Increase prices of unhealthy foods through fiscal measures; Limits on amount of imported unhealthy foods; Limit advertising of unhealthy foods | Government; civil society; Consumers; private sector | Implement fiscal measures to tax unhealthy foods and subsidize healthy local foods; Regional standards for food labeling |
Strengthen local agriculture | Build technical and infrastructure capacity for agriculture; Strengthen the role of women in agriculture; Promote coordination networks from farm to market | Agricultural sector; Government; Gender specialists; Civil society | Build and maintain infrastructure to support agriculture; Use digital platforms to connect agricultural producers to food retailers |
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Guariguata, L.; Rouwette, E.A.; Murphy, M.M.; Saint Ville, A.; Dunn, L.L.; Hickey, G.M.; Jones, W.; Samuels, T.A.; Unwin, N. Using Group Model Building to Describe the System Driving Unhealthy Eating and Identify Intervention Points: A Participatory, Stakeholder Engagement Approach in the Caribbean. Nutrients 2020, 12, 384. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12020384
Guariguata L, Rouwette EA, Murphy MM, Saint Ville A, Dunn LL, Hickey GM, Jones W, Samuels TA, Unwin N. Using Group Model Building to Describe the System Driving Unhealthy Eating and Identify Intervention Points: A Participatory, Stakeholder Engagement Approach in the Caribbean. Nutrients. 2020; 12(2):384. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12020384
Chicago/Turabian StyleGuariguata, Leonor, Etiënne AJA Rouwette, Madhuvanti M Murphy, Arlette Saint Ville, Leith L Dunn, Gordon M Hickey, Waneisha Jones, T Alafia Samuels, and Nigel Unwin. 2020. "Using Group Model Building to Describe the System Driving Unhealthy Eating and Identify Intervention Points: A Participatory, Stakeholder Engagement Approach in the Caribbean" Nutrients 12, no. 2: 384. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12020384
APA StyleGuariguata, L., Rouwette, E. A., Murphy, M. M., Saint Ville, A., Dunn, L. L., Hickey, G. M., Jones, W., Samuels, T. A., & Unwin, N. (2020). Using Group Model Building to Describe the System Driving Unhealthy Eating and Identify Intervention Points: A Participatory, Stakeholder Engagement Approach in the Caribbean. Nutrients, 12(2), 384. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12020384