Let Food Be Our Medicine: Adaptation of Cultural Ethnographic Methods to Create Effective Nutrition Guidelines
The Dietary Guidelines for Americans (DGAs), established to combat the rise of chronic disease in America, serve as the primary source of current nutrition science in the U.S. These guidelines dictate nutrition policy, programming, and medical efforts nationwide. Rates of diet-related chronic diseas...
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ndltd-CLAREMONT-oai-scholarship.claremont.edu-cmc_theses-32152019-10-16T03:05:49Z Let Food Be Our Medicine: Adaptation of Cultural Ethnographic Methods to Create Effective Nutrition Guidelines Joshi, Shivali The Dietary Guidelines for Americans (DGAs), established to combat the rise of chronic disease in America, serve as the primary source of current nutrition science in the U.S. These guidelines dictate nutrition policy, programming, and medical efforts nationwide. Rates of diet-related chronic disease, however, continue to increase, despite the efforts of the DGAs and subsequent programming. This is particularly prevalent in low income communities and communities of color. In examining the DGAs, we found a lack of relevant discussion regarding the impacts of cultural differences on nutritional health. Efforts to integrate culture were limited to static cultural competency discourse. Thus, we propose an alternative model to understanding cultural experiences within nutrition. An in-depth literature review revealed the importance of three elements as a part of the cultural ethnographic model: structural barriers and inequities, cultural consonance, and cultural healing methods. In an effort to apply this framework to a sample population, we looked at experiences of South Asian populations in and around the United States to create a survey format that incorporates ethnographic considerations into guidelines on nutrition. 2019-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/2229 https://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3215&context=cmc_theses © 2019 Shivali M Joshi default CMC Senior Theses Scholarship @ Claremont Nutrition culture ethnography South Asian community Community Health and Preventive Medicine |
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Nutrition culture ethnography South Asian community Community Health and Preventive Medicine Joshi, Shivali Let Food Be Our Medicine: Adaptation of Cultural Ethnographic Methods to Create Effective Nutrition Guidelines |
description |
The Dietary Guidelines for Americans (DGAs), established to combat the rise of chronic disease in America, serve as the primary source of current nutrition science in the U.S. These guidelines dictate nutrition policy, programming, and medical efforts nationwide. Rates of diet-related chronic disease, however, continue to increase, despite the efforts of the DGAs and subsequent programming. This is particularly prevalent in low income communities and communities of color. In examining the DGAs, we found a lack of relevant discussion regarding the impacts of cultural differences on nutritional health. Efforts to integrate culture were limited to static cultural competency discourse. Thus, we propose an alternative model to understanding cultural experiences within nutrition. An in-depth literature review revealed the importance of three elements as a part of the cultural ethnographic model: structural barriers and inequities, cultural consonance, and cultural healing methods. In an effort to apply this framework to a sample population, we looked at experiences of South Asian populations in and around the United States to create a survey format that incorporates ethnographic considerations into guidelines on nutrition. |
author |
Joshi, Shivali |
author_facet |
Joshi, Shivali |
author_sort |
Joshi, Shivali |
title |
Let Food Be Our Medicine: Adaptation of Cultural Ethnographic Methods to Create Effective Nutrition Guidelines |
title_short |
Let Food Be Our Medicine: Adaptation of Cultural Ethnographic Methods to Create Effective Nutrition Guidelines |
title_full |
Let Food Be Our Medicine: Adaptation of Cultural Ethnographic Methods to Create Effective Nutrition Guidelines |
title_fullStr |
Let Food Be Our Medicine: Adaptation of Cultural Ethnographic Methods to Create Effective Nutrition Guidelines |
title_full_unstemmed |
Let Food Be Our Medicine: Adaptation of Cultural Ethnographic Methods to Create Effective Nutrition Guidelines |
title_sort |
let food be our medicine: adaptation of cultural ethnographic methods to create effective nutrition guidelines |
publisher |
Scholarship @ Claremont |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
https://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/2229 https://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3215&context=cmc_theses |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT joshishivali letfoodbeourmedicineadaptationofculturalethnographicmethodstocreateeffectivenutritionguidelines |
_version_ |
1719268385222557696 |