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Ethnicity and children's diets: the practices and perceptions of mothers in two minority ethnic groups in D enmark
Author(s) -
Nielsen Annemette,
Krasnik Allan,
Holm Lotte
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
maternal and child nutrition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.181
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1740-8709
pISSN - 1740-8695
DOI - 10.1111/mcn.12043
Subject(s) - ethnic group , medicine , focus group , immigration , context (archaeology) , public health , sociology , nursing , political science , paleontology , anthropology , law , biology
This study explores concerns and dilemmas connected with diet, health and child‐feeding in families with ethnic minority background. The aim is to contribute to better targeting of dietary advice to ethnic minority parents in D enmark. Four focus group interviews were carried out with mothers of children between 4 months and 2 and a half years who were descendants of T urkish or P akistani immigrants. The focus groups investigated: (1) everyday feeding practices; (2) values and concerns behind food choice; (3) social and cultural norms influencing feeding and eating practices; (4) experienced dilemmas in dietary change; and (5) sources of nutritional advice. Public health authorities in D enmark tend to link diet‐related health problems among ethnic minority populations with their ethnic identity, dichotomising ethnic and D anish dietary habits. This may overlook values and concerns other than those related to ethnicity that are sometimes more important in determining food habits. The present study found that child‐feeding practices were shaped by two main aims: (1) securing and improving child health; and (2) ensuring multi‐cultural eating competence in children. The results confirm that ethnic distinctions do matter in the concerns and dilemmas mothers experience when feeding their children, but they also challenge the health authorities' reliance on dichotomies in promoting health among immigrant families. The participants' ethnic self‐identification through food practices did not refer primarily to the birthplaces of their parents. Rather, it was context dependent and directed simultaneously towards majority and minority culture.

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