Are Healthy Eating Messages Reaching NYC Immigrants?

In U.S. cities, obesity-related health conditions disproportionately impact immigrant communities. To fix the problem, advocates must move beyond one-size-fits-all solutions and adopt a more nuanced approach—one that takes into account the traditional eating habits of different cultures.

The South Bronx: Not exactly known for its dining options. Matias Rothkopf on Flickr

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This piece originally ran on Feet in 2 Worlds.

At a cooking class at the Bronx Spanish Evangelical Church in December, around 30 participants sat under fluorescent lights at tables with Christmas-themed plastic coverings. Fruits and vegetables lay in front of them on flimsy cutting boards. The day’s menu: Veggie pizza on whole wheat English muffins and a fruit and yogurt parfait. The instructions were translated into Spanish, as two-thirds of the class was Hispanic. Then everyone started chopping. The children—who made up half the class—used colored plastic knives.

While obesity and related health conditions disproportionately impact Latinos and other minority groups in New York City, there is no coordinated effort to reach immigrant groups with healthy-eating messages. To fill the gap, various organizations and individuals are developing their own ways to encourage these groups to eat healthier.

Gladys Bonilla learned about the “Cooking Matters for Families” class on a visit to the church’s food pantry and soup kitchen. Bonilla moved to the area from Honduras in 1985. At first, one of her two granddaughters didn’t want to go. Now the girls push her to attend the class weekly. “I feel happy in this place,” Bonilla said in Spanish through a translator. “I feel like part of the family here.” Many of the recipes she’s been taught in class aren’t typical of the Honduran food she makes at home for her family. But Bonilla, who has diabetes, said she has learned a lot about healthy eating. She has cut the amount of salt and oil she uses, and eats fewer fried foods.

City Harvest, a non-profit organization that sponsors the six-week course, doesn’t mold its cooking classes around traditional ethnic diets—it simply focuses on teaching healthy cooking techniques, recipes and nutrition basics. But some experts say that to make a major impact on a person’s diet—particularly if they are an immigrant—an understanding of their food culture is key.

“Often people create one-size-fits-all materials and it’s not useful,” said Christina McGeough, a certified diabetes educator who’s worked as a bilingual nutritionist for almost 10 years. “You need to know who the person or population is. Once you know that, you can design a message that speaks to them,” she said.

“When you’re thinking about improving health and cooking, think of heritage as a motivator,” said Sara Baer-Sinnott, president of Oldways, a non-profit that released the Mediterranean diet pyramid in 1993 and has since created pyramids and “healthy plates” for four other ethnic diets. “There’s so much science that continues to come out that traditional diets are so much healthier for not only weight control, but health conditions like cardiovascular disease,” she added.


A food pyramid customized for immigrant diets. Credit: Oldways

For her part, McGeough uses focused tactics with her patients at The Institute for Family Health in the Bronx, 60 percent of whom are minorities, including many immigrants. If her patient is West African, for instance, she may show them a tailored version of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s MyPlate, which replaced the food pyramid last year as the federal guide to healthy eating. McGeough’s version also has a multicolor graphic of a plate, one split into 1/4 starch, 1/4 protein, 1/2 vegetables and an optional fruit. But the options shown on the plate reflect foods commonly found on West African dinner tables, such as starchy cocoyam, cornmeal and cassava and protein-filled black eyed peas, maafe and kitoza.

When working with someone who is Muslim, she inquires about their fasting schedule and explains how it may affect their diabetes management. For those from the Dominican Republic, McGeough may explain how root vegetables can impact a patient’s diabetes. The customized plate she uses to encourage Dominicans to put together healthy meals has options ranging from starchy mofongo and yams to protein-packed beans and pork.

Latinos are particularly at risk for obesity, diabetes and related health conditions like heart disease. According to the city’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, 26.5 percent of Latinos in New York City are obese, and Latinos have the highest rate of diabetes in the city–13.2 percent.

According to McGeough, many immigrants eat the same amount of food as they did in their home country, but are less active once in the U.S., while others give up traditional foods and switch to the many convenience and easy-to-access foods available here. This can increase waistlines, as well as the chance of developing diabetes.

“Lots of communities of immigrants live in low-income areas where there’s less fresh fruits and vegetables available and more fast food,” said McGeough, who was also the nutrition editor of the “Healthy Taste of Corona Cookbook,” which features healthy recipes from the various cultural groups living in the Queens neighborhood.

The South Bronx, where the City Harvest class was held, is often labeled a “food desert” because of limited access to fresh produce and other healthy foods. Down the street from the Bronx Spanish Evangelical Church at the Bravo supermarket, where ingredients for the cooking classes are bought, shoppers had mixed opinions about the quality of fruits and vegetables available in the neighborhood. Diana Perez, who used to live in the area, said it was hard to get healthy food. “But when you can’t get (to other neighborhoods), this is where we have to go,” she said. “It’s what you put out is what we’re going to buy.”

With diamond-shaped yellow signs screaming “Save More!” in Spanish and English, the Bravo had just a small produce section in the front. However, it did carry an array of products catering to the Hispanic community, like tomatillos and malangas.

How to pick and choose healthy foods from this type of supermarket is one part of Lorena Drago’s lesson plan. A dietitian and certified diabetes educator, she runs “grocery store tours.” On one of her tours through Long Island supermarkets last year, most of the participants were from Central America, so Drago altered the shopping list to contain root vegetables such as taro, cassava and Caribbean yams, as well as plantains, pork rinds and creams widely used in the region. To minimize confusion, each food was accompanied with a graphic, since one food can have multiple names in the Hispanic community, Drago said.

Drago said that she’s learned through her experiences of reaching out to different groups that healthy nutrition isn’t an easy concept to teach or apply in one’s life. To make it work, she believes healthy eating messages must be tailored, repeated and reinforced through experiences like cooking classes or group trips to the supermarket. “You don’t get good at this by hearing the message once or getting a pamphlet,” Drago said.

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Juhie Bhatia is a journalist focused on gender and health issues. Formerly the managing editor of Women’s eNews, she’s also written for The Guardian, Rolling Stone, Nature Medicine and Bust magazine, among others.

Tags: new york cityfood deserts

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