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Published in: Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health 3/2014

01-06-2014 | Original Paper

Baseline Socio-demographic Characteristics and Self-Reported Diet and Physical Activity Shifts Among Recent Immigrants Participating in the Randomized Controlled Lifestyle Intervention: “Live Well”

Authors: Alison Tovar, Rebecca Boulos, Sarah Sliwa, Aviva Must, David M. Gute, Nesly Metayer, Raymond R. Hyatt, Kenneth Chui, Alex Pirie, Christina Kamis Luongo, Christina Economos

Published in: Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health | Issue 3/2014

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Abstract

The goal of this paper is to describe the baseline characteristics of Live Well (intervention to prevent weight gain in recent immigrant mother–child dyads from Brazil, Haiti, and Latin America) participants, and to explore self-reported changes in diet and physical activity post-immigration. Baseline data from 383 mothers were used for this study. Dyads attended a measurement day where they completed self-administered surveys collecting information about socio-demographics, diet, physical activity, other psychosocial variables, and height and weight. Haitian mothers’ socio-demographic profile differed significantly from that of Brazilians’ and Latinas’: they have been in the US for a shorter period of time, have higher rates of unemployment, are less likely to be married, more likely to have ≥3 children, more likely to be obese, and have immigrated for family or other reasons. In multivariate models, self-reported changes in diet and physical activity since migrating to the US were significantly associated with BMI with non-linear relationships identified. Future research is needed to understand how diet and physical activity change while acculturating to the US and explore the adoption of both healthy and unhealthy dietary changes.
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Metadata
Title
Baseline Socio-demographic Characteristics and Self-Reported Diet and Physical Activity Shifts Among Recent Immigrants Participating in the Randomized Controlled Lifestyle Intervention: “Live Well”
Authors
Alison Tovar
Rebecca Boulos
Sarah Sliwa
Aviva Must
David M. Gute
Nesly Metayer
Raymond R. Hyatt
Kenneth Chui
Alex Pirie
Christina Kamis Luongo
Christina Economos
Publication date
01-06-2014
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health / Issue 3/2014
Print ISSN: 1557-1912
Electronic ISSN: 1557-1920
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10903-013-9778-8

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