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Título
Urban environment and dietary behaviours as perceived by residents living in socioeconomically diverse neighbourhoods: A qualitative study in a Mediterranean context
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Qualitative research
Food environment
Neighbourhood
Diet
Socioeconomic status
Clasificación UNESCO
63 Sociología
3105.07 Hábitos de Alimentación
Fecha de publicación
2021-01
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Rivera-Navarro, J., Conde, P., Díez, J., Gutiérrez-Sastre, M., González-Salgado, I., Sandín, M., Gittelsohn, J., & Franco, M. (2021). Urban environment and dietary behaviours as perceived by residents living in socioeconomically diverse neighbourhoods: A qualitative study in a Mediterranean context. Appetite, 157. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.APPET.2020.104983
Resumen
[EN] Scholars have determined that low socioeconomic status (SES) is associated with unhealthy dietary behaviours
and that local food environments shape food inequality. Less is known about how residents’ perceptions of their
food environment affect their dietary behaviours. We conducted 37 semistructured interviews and 29 focus
groups in three socioeconomically distinct neighbourhoods in Madrid. We identified the following main categories
related to social and physical food environments: (a) perceptions of healthy and unhealthy dietary behaviours,
(b) children’s relationships with food, (c) precariousness and (d) residential food retailer types. Older
adults were perceived as healthier consumers, whereas younger people were identified as fast-food consumers. In
the low- and middle-SES neighbourhoods, residents saw home-cooked legume-based stews as healthy food. In the
high-SES neighbourhood, television cooking programs were highlighted as a positive influence. In the low- and
middle-SES neighbourhoods, grandparents played an essential role in the transmission of healthy eating habits to
their grandchildren. In the high-SES neighbourhood, children’s diets at home were determined by school menus.
In the low- and middle-SES neighbourhoods, participants talked about a black market where food could be
purchased. Food retailers with low-quality foods were also highlighted. In all neighbourhoods, residents missed
traditional food stores, and in the low- and middle-SES neighbourhoods, immigrant-run food stores were not well
accepted. Our study presents the concepts shaping how neighbourhood SES differences affect dietary behaviours
according to residents of a large Mediterranean city.
Descripción
El artículo describe las desigualdades alimentarias en tres barrios de Madrid utilizando metodología cualitativa (entrevistas semiestructuradas y grupos de discusión)
URI
ISSN
0195-6663
DOI
10.1016/j.appet.2020.104983
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