Food Choice and Dietary Perspectives of Young, Urban, Black Pregnant Women: A Focus Group Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Theoretical Framework
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Research Trustworthiness
3. Results
3.1. Food Access
3.1.1. Food Apartheid
“Because I live by a donut shop, [they] have the mango smoothies...like that’s literally yogurt…I wake up in the middle of the night and I’m hungry, I’m making a smoothie. As for a chicken sandwich or four-piece nuggets, I don’t eat that.”(FG 2)
3.1.2. Preference for Convenient Food Options
“They [doctors] be like okay eat something more healthy, but at the time I was working. So, I’m sitting here eating what y’all telling me not to eat. That’s messing up my health.”(FG 2)
“When I’m out and I’m ripping and running and I don’t like pack me a lunch or something, it’s like it’s easier to just stop at McDonald’s or somewhere and get something quick.”(FG 1)
“I made about 75% of prepping my stuff than getting like regular foods say if like, say I had an early doctor’s appointment… I was maybe like you cooking something or you know I’ll probably grab an apple or my yogurt…but then I’m hungry so then I’m like okay let’s go to McDonald’s. Like I don’t even like to eat McDonald’s other than chicken sandwich other than burgers…so I’ll stop and just get that.”(FG 1)
3.1.3. Food Expenses
3.1.4. Diet Restrictions
“Like this with shrimp in it, this with you know what I mean it’s repeating with the same thing. You can do a pork chop, you can do a pork loin, pig, you can do a steak. You can get so many options.”(FG 2)
“You can’t like really go to a restaurant and get food. It’s more like you have to cook and you have to, and if you don’t well I better got snacks cuz it looks like I ain’t gonna eat.”(FG 2)
3.1.5. Repetitive Options
“It would be, first of all colorful. Colors make everything better. It would have different options and different things you can do with oh a spinach. How many different options can you do instead of just a spinach salad or a spinach dip?”(FG 2)
“I need some healthy foods that taste good, and I need some options. Like I need to know like what’s out there. Because like [Participant], I think she’s vegetarian…she be bringing new stuff so we tried and I’m like okay well let me go to the store and see if I can get this.”(FG 2)
3.2. Stress and Family Influence on Eating
3.2.1. Pressure to Lose Weight
“She’s [Doctor] like, ‘Oh it’s your weight. And you need to lose weight’ I’m like, this happened before I got pregnant. Like, I gained like, I gained 80 pounds pregnant with her. So, I got my smallest I ever was before I got pregnant, but this was before I got pregnant, this was before I was big.”(FG2)
3.2.2. Appetite Changes Due to Stress
“When I was pregnant, I lost 65 pounds throughout my pregnancy…that’s cuz I was stressed and depressed like people don’t understand. Like I couldn’t function when I was pregnant. Like my man was not there at all. The only thing that saved me throughout my pregnancy was my mama and... that was it cuz I promise you.... that’s how bad it was.”(FG 2)
3.3. Need for Nutritional Education during Pregnancy
3.3.1. Awareness of Healthy Eating and Perspectives on Healthy Food
“I get upset because I just look at it like this is not gonna fill me up and then you’ll eat it and you’ll still be hungry I swear. Some would fill me up but most times I just be like this is not enough for me.”(FG 2)
“I would wanna learn like things to fulfill me...I could eat 10 bowls of greens straight nonstop...but it’s like if I get up and eat an apple, I’ll literally be hungry 10 min later. I’m constantly eating and I’m like okay I eat an apple, I eat some carrots with peanut butter and I get like um like a yogurt or whatever but it’s like that stuff don’t fill me up.”(FG1)
3.3.2. Developing Healthy Eating Habits
“In the beginning [of pregnancy]…I was eating healthy cuz I’m a dancer, but then of course you have your days where you want some Popeyes. But ever since I got pregnant it literally knocked all that out, and I was eating healthy.”(FG 1)
“I actually got healthier… I’m able to eat rice without butter or sugar or salt and pepper, nothing, just plain. I’m able to eat my vegetables plain without any extra stuff with it. I eat salad with no salad dressing.”(FG 1)
4. Discussion
Implications for Practice, Research, and Policy
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant | Age (Years) | Race | Ethnicity | Marital Status | Income | Employed | Education |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Miss A | 23 | Black | Not Hispanic | Single | USD 520/month | Not employed | High school |
Miss B | 23 | Black | Not Hispanic | Single | none | Not employed | High school |
Miss C | 22 | Black | Not Hispanic | Single | USD 16/hour | Full time | Some college |
Miss D | 25 | Black | Not Hispanic | Single | USD 15/hour | Full time | High school |
Miss E | 22 | Black | Not Hispanic | Single | USD 620/month | Full time | High school |
Miss F | 22 | Black | Not Hispanic | Single | USD 2250/month | Full time | Some college |
Miss G | 20 | Black | Not Hispanic | Single | none | Not employed | High school |
Miss H | 21 | Black | Not Hispanic | Single | USD 12.50/hour | Full time | High school |
Miss I | 19 | Black | Not Hispanic | Single | USD 14/hour | Full time | High school |
Theme | Subtheme | Definition |
---|---|---|
Food Access | Food Apartheid | Difficulty in accessing healthy food options based on where they live and structural and systemic issues affecting food access. Factors such as the location of grocery stores, farmers’ markets, and restaurants can impact the availability and affordability of healthy food options for pregnant women. |
Preference for convenient food options | The challenge of balancing busy schedules with healthy eating habits. It recognizes that sometimes, due to time constraints or lack of meal planning, pregnant women may resort to convenient food options such as fast food or processed snacks. | |
Food Expenses | Increased cost of food as a barrier to healthy eating. | |
Dietary restrictions | The struggles faced by Black pregnant women who follow a vegetarian diet or who have health issues due to limited options available to them. | |
Repetitive Options | Challenges in the limited variety of food options, awareness of diverse recipes, and restaurant availability that limit the selection of healthy food choices. | |
Stress and Family Influence on Eating | Pressure to Lose Weight | The tendency of individuals to attribute their weight gain to their eating habits or dietary choices, leading to feelings of guilt and shame. |
Appetite Changes Due to Stress | Appetite changes or desire to eat decreases or increases due to stress or as a mechanism to cope with difficult situations. | |
Need for Nutritional Education During Pregnancy | Awareness of Health Eating and Perspectives on Health Food | Understanding healthy eating and its impacts on baby and maternal health still has challenges in terms of healthy eating due to still feeling hungry after a healthy meal/snack, or worrying about portion sizes, which highlight the need for more nutritional education. |
Developing Health Eating Habits | Adaption of healthier eating practices because of pregnancy, but it is not easily maintained, which emphasizes the need for sustainable nutritional education. |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Burton, T.C.J.; Crooks, N.; Pezley, L.; Hemphill, N.O.; Li, Y.; Sawatpanich, A.; Farrow, V.; Erbe, K.; Kessee, N.; Reed, L.; et al. Food Choice and Dietary Perspectives of Young, Urban, Black Pregnant Women: A Focus Group Study. Nutrients 2024, 16, 781. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16060781
Burton TCJ, Crooks N, Pezley L, Hemphill NO, Li Y, Sawatpanich A, Farrow V, Erbe K, Kessee N, Reed L, et al. Food Choice and Dietary Perspectives of Young, Urban, Black Pregnant Women: A Focus Group Study. Nutrients. 2024; 16(6):781. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16060781
Chicago/Turabian StyleBurton, Tristesse Catessa Jasmin, Natasha Crooks, Lacey Pezley, Nefertiti OjiNjideka Hemphill, Yanqiao Li, Arissara Sawatpanich, Vanessa Farrow, Katherine Erbe, Nicollette Kessee, Luecendia Reed, and et al. 2024. "Food Choice and Dietary Perspectives of Young, Urban, Black Pregnant Women: A Focus Group Study" Nutrients 16, no. 6: 781. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16060781
APA StyleBurton, T. C. J., Crooks, N., Pezley, L., Hemphill, N. O., Li, Y., Sawatpanich, A., Farrow, V., Erbe, K., Kessee, N., Reed, L., Tussing-Humphreys, L., & Koenig, M. D. (2024). Food Choice and Dietary Perspectives of Young, Urban, Black Pregnant Women: A Focus Group Study. Nutrients, 16(6), 781. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16060781