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American Journal of Public Health | 2010

Relationship Between Past Food Deprivation and Current Dietary Practices and Weight Status Among Cambodian Refugee Women in Lowell, MA

Jerusha Nelson Peterman; Parke Wilde; Sidney Liang; Odilia I. Bermudez; Linda Silka; Beatrice Lorge Rogers

OBJECTIVES We investigated Cambodian refugee womens past food experiences and the relationship between those experiences and current food beliefs, dietary practices, and weight status. METHODS Focus group participants (n = 11) described past food experiences and current health-related food beliefs and behaviors. We randomly selected survey participants (n = 133) from a comprehensive list of Cambodian households in Lowell, Massachusetts. We collected height, weight, 24-hour dietary recall, food beliefs, past food experience, and demographic information. We constructed a measure of past food deprivation from focus group and survey responses. We analyzed data with multivariate logistic and linear regression models. RESULTS Participants experienced severe past food deprivation and insecurity. Those with higher past food-deprivation scores were more likely to currently report eating meat with fat (odds ratio [OR] = 1.14 for every point increase on the 9-to-27-point food-deprivation measure), and to be overweight or obese by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (OR = 1.28) and World Health Organization (OR = 1.18) standards. CONCLUSIONS Refugees who experienced extensive food deprivation or insecurity may be more likely to engage in unhealthful eating practices and to be overweight or obese than are those who experienced less-extreme food deprivation or insecurity.


Food and Nutrition Bulletin | 2007

Intensifying efforts to reduce child malnutrition in India: An evaluation of the Dular program in Jharkhand, India

Tamara Dubowitz; Dorothy Levinson; Jerusha Nelson Peterman; Geeta Verma; Sangita Jacob; Werner Schultink

Background The Dular strategy is a unique nutrition initiative initiated by UNICEF India in collaboration with the states of Bihar and Jharkhand. Designed to complement the governments Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and build upon its infrastructure, one of the major goals of the Dular program is to capitalize and develop community resources at the grassroots level. The emphasis of the Dular program is on establishing a community-based tracking system of the health status of women and of children 0 to 36 months of age by neighborhood-based local resource persons (LRPs). The main objectives of the Dular program include increased prenatal attendance, improvement in breastfeeding and colostrum delivery, improved nutritional practices, and decreased malnutrition. Objectives and methods An impact evaluation of 744 women and children in Jharkhand examined antenatal and birthing practices, colostrum delivery, delivery of breastmilk as first food, reported use of iodized salt, measured iodized salt status, immunization and weight-for-age z-scores (WAZ) of children 0 to 36 months of age, controlling for various measures of socioeconomic status. Results Differences were found between Dular and non-Dular villages in all major outcomes. Particularly noteworthy is that young children in Dular areas had a 45% lower prevalence of severe malnutrition and were four times more likely to receive colostrum than those in non-Dular villages. Conclusions Our evaluation results indicate that programmatic overlays to the ICDS program, which focus primary attention on children 0 to 36 months of age and on women, have the potential to transform into a cost-effective instrument for reducing child malnutrition in India, with implications for women and children in India.


Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health | 2013

Food Insecurity Among Cambodian Refugee Women Two Decades Post Resettlement

Jerusha Nelson Peterman; Parke Wilde; Linda Silka; Odilia I. Bermudez; Beatrice Lorge Rogers

Resettled refugees have high rates of chronic disease, which may be partially due to persistent food insecurity. This study describes food experiences on arrival in the U.S. and current food security status and examines characteristics related to food insecurity in a well-established refugee community. Focus groups and a survey assessed food security status and personal characteristics of Cambodian women in Lowell, MA, USA. Multivariate logistic regression was used to examine relationships with food insecurity. Current rates of food insecurity are high. In multivariate models, food insecurity was positively associated with being depressed and being widowed, and negatively associated with higher income and acculturation. Early arrivers (1980s) had difficulty in the U.S. food system on arrival, while later arrivers (1990s–2000s) did not. Refugee agencies should consider strategically devoting resources to ensure successful early transition to the U.S. food environment and long-term food security of refugees.


Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2011

Acculturation, Education, Nutrition Education, and Household Composition Are Related to Dietary Practices among Cambodian Refugee Women in Lowell, MA

Jerusha Nelson Peterman; Linda Silka; Odilia I. Bermudez; Parke Wilde; Beatrice Lorge Rogers

Refugees in the United States have higher rates of some chronic diseases than US-born residents or other first-generation immigrants. This may be partially a result of dietary practices in the United States. There is limited information about which factors are related to dietary practices in refugee populations, particularly those who have been in the United States for 10 to 20 years. Research with Cambodian communities may be useful for examining the relationship between refugee characteristics and dietary practices. Two focus groups (n=11) and a survey (n=150) of Cambodian refugee women were conducted in Lowell, MA, from 2007 to 2008. χ(2) analyses, t tests, and analysis of variance tests were used to describe differences in dietary practices (24-hour recall and a targeted qualitative food assessment) by group characteristics. Higher acculturation was related to higher likelihood of eating brown rice/whole grains, and to lower likelihood of eating high-sodium Asian sauces. Higher education was related to higher likelihood of eating vegetables and fruits and to eating white rice fewer times. Nutrition education and receiving dietary advice from a health care provider were related to higher likelihood of eating whole grains/brown rice. Having a child at home was related to a higher likelihood of eating fast food. Among Cambodian refugees who have been in the United States for 10 to 20 years, dietary practices appear to have a relationship with acculturation (positive association), the interrupted education common to refugees (negative association), nutrition education from either programs or health care providers (positive association), and having a child at home (negative association).


Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | 2010

Factors Related to Dietary Practices Among Cambodian Refugee Women

Jerusha Nelson Peterman; Linda Silka; Odilia I. Bermudez; Parke Wilde; Beatrice Lorge Rogers

Results: Reflected in the perceptions of individuals engaged in the process of diabetes care and education were the following themes: Diet Dilemma, Don’t Know What We Don’t Know, Expendable Time, Reluctance, Support/ Exchange Experience, Indirect Services, Direct Services, Disrupted Care, and Fragmented Alliances. Conclusions and Implications: Data contributing to the development of the themes reveal opportunities for improving the process of diabetes care and education. Many avenues exist for potential implementation of alliances. Services currently available, coupled with introduction of additional services, would facilitate a statewide effort to reduce or control diabetes among disparate populations throughout Oklahoma. By exploring these alliances and investigating additional avenues of action, associative factors that lead to development of the themes can be addressed.


Journal of Nutrition | 2006

Individual Weight Change Is Associated with Household Food Security Status

Parke Wilde; Jerusha Nelson Peterman


The FASEB Journal | 2015

Live Well Springfield (LWS): Neighborhood-Level Baseline Survey Results of a Collaborative Community Transformation Movement

Elena T. Carbone; Elaine Puleo; Jesse Mushenko; Timothy Paradis; Hannah Stenger; Jerusha Nelson Peterman; Kathy Wicks; Catherine Ratte; Jessica Collins


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Household food security and consumption of a traditional medicinal tincture, sraa tenam, among Cambodian women in Massachusetts (LB480)

Lorraine Cordeiro; Jerusha Nelson Peterman


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Household food insecurity is associated with depression among young Cambodian women in Massachusetts (LB476)

Shanshan Chen; Jerusha Nelson Peterman; Alexandra C Purdue-Smithe; Nicholas Otis; Lorraine Cordeiro


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Healthful cultural foods and safety nets: experiences of immigrant and Puerto Rican families in Massachusetts (380.5)

Jerusha Nelson Peterman; Lorraine Cordeiro

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Lorraine Cordeiro

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Linda Silka

University of Massachusetts Lowell

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Shanshan Chen

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Elena T. Carbone

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Jean Anliker

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Nicholas Otis

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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