The importance of sociocultural context when choosing to eat healthier

Objective: To explore how working women in metropolitan Malaysia make food decisions. Design: A grounded theory approach and semistructured interviews. Setting: A large university in metropolitan Malaysia. Participants: Twenty-four female employees purposively recruited to vary in ethnicity, body ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dai, Jane, Zulkefli, Nur Fadzlina, Moy, Foong Ming, Humphries, Debbie L.
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier Science Inc 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/33397/
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Summary:Objective: To explore how working women in metropolitan Malaysia make food decisions. Design: A grounded theory approach and semistructured interviews. Setting: A large university in metropolitan Malaysia. Participants: Twenty-four female employees purposively recruited to vary in ethnicity, body mass index, age, and marital status via convenience sampling. Phenomenon of Interest: Perceptions of sociocultural influences on healthy eating behavior among working women. Analysis: Researchers audio-recorded interviews and analyzed verbatim transcripts. Results: Working women shared a desire to eat a healthier, more balanced diet by reducing processed food consumption through home-cooked meals. Participants described aspects of their living situations and cultural values about food that made it seem impossible to change their diets. Living with other people limited their ability to cook the food they wanted to eat. In addition, unspoken rules about communal eating in Malaysia, such as not refusing food and not wasting food, prevented working women from practicing healthy eating. Conclusions and Implications: In this population of working women in metropolitan Malaysia, experiences of time scarcity and limited sociocultural support for behavior change were major barriers to healthy eating. Interventions could prioritize leveraging these realities about food to facilitate environments in which women feel like they have control of their own food intake.