Compounding effects of stress on diet, physical activity, and wellbeing among African American parents: a qualitative study to inform the LEADS health promotion trial

The purpose of the study was to conduct in-depth qualitative interviews to understand the lived experiences of African American parents of overweight adolescents who had previously participated in a family-based weight loss program and to utilize these insights to inform the essential elements of th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of behavioral medicine 2024-08, Vol.47 (4), p.647-661
Hauptverfasser: Kipp, Colby, Wilson, Dawn K., Brown, Asia, Quattlebaum, Mary, Loncar, Haylee, Sweeney, Allison M., Abshire, Demetrius A.
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container_end_page 661
container_issue 4
container_start_page 647
container_title Journal of behavioral medicine
container_volume 47
creator Kipp, Colby
Wilson, Dawn K.
Brown, Asia
Quattlebaum, Mary
Loncar, Haylee
Sweeney, Allison M.
Abshire, Demetrius A.
description The purpose of the study was to conduct in-depth qualitative interviews to understand the lived experiences of African American parents of overweight adolescents who had previously participated in a family-based weight loss program and to utilize these insights to inform the essential elements of the LEADS trial, an integrated resilience stress management and health promotion intervention. Participants ( N  = 30) were African American parents and/or caregivers (96.7% female; M age  = 49.73, SD  = 10.88; M BMI  = 37.63, SD  = 8.21) of adolescents with overweight and/or obesity. Interviews were transcribed and coded using inductive and deductive approaches for themes by two independent coders. Inter-rater reliability was acceptable ( r  = 0.70–0.80) and discrepancies were resolved to 100% agreement. Prominent stress themes included caregiver responsibilities, work, interpersonal family conflict, and physical and emotional consequences of chronic stress. Participants also noted decreases in physical activity and poor food choices due to stress. Coping mechanisms included prayer/meditation, church social support, and talking with family/partner. Results highlight the importance of mitigating stress among African American parents through stress management and cultural/familial resilience approaches to increase the likelihood of engagement in behavioral strategies in health promotion programs. Future studies should assess the utility of incorporating stress management components and health promotion techniques to improve health outcomes among African American families.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10865-024-00477-3
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subjects Adaptation, Psychological
Adolescent
Adolescents
Adult
African Americans
Black or African American - psychology
Body weight
Body weight loss
Caregiver burden
Caregivers
Coping strategies
Diet
Discrepancies
Exercise
Exercise - psychology
Families & family life
Family conflict
Family Medicine
Female
General Practice
Health behavior
Health promotion
Health Promotion - methods
Health Psychology
Health status
Healthy food
Humans
Interpersonal conflict
Interviews
Male
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Meditation
Middle Aged
Obesity
Occupational stress
Overweight
Overweight - ethnology
Overweight - psychology
Overweight - therapy
Parents & parenting
Parents - psychology
Physical activity
Qualitative Research
Reliability
Resilience
Social interactions
Social support
Stress
Stress management
Stress, Psychological - psychology
Talking
Weight control
Weight loss
title Compounding effects of stress on diet, physical activity, and wellbeing among African American parents: a qualitative study to inform the LEADS health promotion trial
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