The process of culturally adapting the Healthy Beginnings early obesity prevention program for Arabic and Chinese mothers in Australia

Abstract Background Behavioural interventions for the early prevention of childhood obesity mostly focus on English-speaking populations in high-income countries. Cultural adaptation is an emerging strategy for implementing evidence-based interventions among different populations and regions. This p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sarah Marshall, Sarah Taki, Penny Love, Yvonne Laird, Marianne Kearney, Nancy Tam, Louise A. Baur, Chris Rissel, Li Ming Wen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10270-5
id doaj-7ab8a1f459ee4df88d451f35bf567083
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7ab8a1f459ee4df88d451f35bf5670832021-02-07T12:04:33ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-02-0121111610.1186/s12889-021-10270-5The process of culturally adapting the Healthy Beginnings early obesity prevention program for Arabic and Chinese mothers in AustraliaSarah Marshall0Sarah Taki1Penny Love2Yvonne Laird3Marianne Kearney4Nancy Tam5Louise A. Baur6Chris Rissel7Li Ming Wen8Sydney School of Public Health, University of SydneySydney School of Public Health, University of SydneyThe National Health and Medical Research Council Centre of Research Excellence in the Early Prevention of Obesity in Childhood (EPOCH CRE)Sydney School of Public Health, University of SydneyHealth Promotion Unit, Population Health Research and Evaluation Hub, Sydney Local Health DistrictHealth Promotion Unit, Population Health Research and Evaluation Hub, Sydney Local Health DistrictSydney School of Public Health, University of SydneySydney School of Public Health, University of SydneySydney School of Public Health, University of SydneyAbstract Background Behavioural interventions for the early prevention of childhood obesity mostly focus on English-speaking populations in high-income countries. Cultural adaptation is an emerging strategy for implementing evidence-based interventions among different populations and regions. This paper describes the initial process of culturally adapting Healthy Beginnings, an evidence-based early childhood obesity prevention program, for Arabic and Chinese speaking migrant mothers and infants in Sydney, Australia. Methods The cultural adaptation process followed the Stages of Cultural Adaptation theoretical model and is reported using the Framework for Reporting Adaptations and Modifications-Enhanced. We first established the adaptation rationale, then considered program underpinnings and the core components for effectiveness. To inform adaptations, we reviewed the scientific literature and engaged stakeholders. Consultations included focus groups with 24 Arabic and 22 Chinese speaking migrant mothers and interviews with 20 health professionals. With input from project partners, bi-cultural staff and community organisations, findings informed cultural adaptations to the content and delivery features of the Healthy Beginnings program. Results Program structure and delivery mode were retained to preserve fidelity (i.e. staged nurse calls with key program messages addressing modifiable obesity-related behaviours: infant feeding, active play, sedentary behaviours and sleep). Qualitative analysis of focus group and interview data resulted in descriptive themes concerning cultural practices and beliefs related to infant obesity-related behaviours and perceptions of child weight among Arabic and Chinese speaking mothers. Based on the literature and local study findings, cultural adaptations were made to recruitment approaches, staffing (bi-cultural nurses and project staff) and program content (modified call scripts and culturally adapted written health promotion materials). Conclusions This cultural adaptation of Healthy Beginnings followed an established process model and resulted in a program with enhanced relevance and accessibility among Arabic and Chinese speaking migrant mothers. This work will inform the future cultural adaptation stages: testing, refining, and trialling the culturally adapted Healthy Beginnings program to assess acceptability, feasibility and effectiveness.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10270-5PreventionChildhood obesityHealth promotionNutritionInfantCulture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah Marshall
Sarah Taki
Penny Love
Yvonne Laird
Marianne Kearney
Nancy Tam
Louise A. Baur
Chris Rissel
Li Ming Wen
spellingShingle Sarah Marshall
Sarah Taki
Penny Love
Yvonne Laird
Marianne Kearney
Nancy Tam
Louise A. Baur
Chris Rissel
Li Ming Wen
The process of culturally adapting the Healthy Beginnings early obesity prevention program for Arabic and Chinese mothers in Australia
BMC Public Health
Prevention
Childhood obesity
Health promotion
Nutrition
Infant
Culture
author_facet Sarah Marshall
Sarah Taki
Penny Love
Yvonne Laird
Marianne Kearney
Nancy Tam
Louise A. Baur
Chris Rissel
Li Ming Wen
author_sort Sarah Marshall
title The process of culturally adapting the Healthy Beginnings early obesity prevention program for Arabic and Chinese mothers in Australia
title_short The process of culturally adapting the Healthy Beginnings early obesity prevention program for Arabic and Chinese mothers in Australia
title_full The process of culturally adapting the Healthy Beginnings early obesity prevention program for Arabic and Chinese mothers in Australia
title_fullStr The process of culturally adapting the Healthy Beginnings early obesity prevention program for Arabic and Chinese mothers in Australia
title_full_unstemmed The process of culturally adapting the Healthy Beginnings early obesity prevention program for Arabic and Chinese mothers in Australia
title_sort process of culturally adapting the healthy beginnings early obesity prevention program for arabic and chinese mothers in australia
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Behavioural interventions for the early prevention of childhood obesity mostly focus on English-speaking populations in high-income countries. Cultural adaptation is an emerging strategy for implementing evidence-based interventions among different populations and regions. This paper describes the initial process of culturally adapting Healthy Beginnings, an evidence-based early childhood obesity prevention program, for Arabic and Chinese speaking migrant mothers and infants in Sydney, Australia. Methods The cultural adaptation process followed the Stages of Cultural Adaptation theoretical model and is reported using the Framework for Reporting Adaptations and Modifications-Enhanced. We first established the adaptation rationale, then considered program underpinnings and the core components for effectiveness. To inform adaptations, we reviewed the scientific literature and engaged stakeholders. Consultations included focus groups with 24 Arabic and 22 Chinese speaking migrant mothers and interviews with 20 health professionals. With input from project partners, bi-cultural staff and community organisations, findings informed cultural adaptations to the content and delivery features of the Healthy Beginnings program. Results Program structure and delivery mode were retained to preserve fidelity (i.e. staged nurse calls with key program messages addressing modifiable obesity-related behaviours: infant feeding, active play, sedentary behaviours and sleep). Qualitative analysis of focus group and interview data resulted in descriptive themes concerning cultural practices and beliefs related to infant obesity-related behaviours and perceptions of child weight among Arabic and Chinese speaking mothers. Based on the literature and local study findings, cultural adaptations were made to recruitment approaches, staffing (bi-cultural nurses and project staff) and program content (modified call scripts and culturally adapted written health promotion materials). Conclusions This cultural adaptation of Healthy Beginnings followed an established process model and resulted in a program with enhanced relevance and accessibility among Arabic and Chinese speaking migrant mothers. This work will inform the future cultural adaptation stages: testing, refining, and trialling the culturally adapted Healthy Beginnings program to assess acceptability, feasibility and effectiveness.
topic Prevention
Childhood obesity
Health promotion
Nutrition
Infant
Culture
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10270-5
work_keys_str_mv AT sarahmarshall theprocessofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT sarahtaki theprocessofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT pennylove theprocessofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT yvonnelaird theprocessofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT mariannekearney theprocessofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT nancytam theprocessofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT louiseabaur theprocessofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT chrisrissel theprocessofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT limingwen theprocessofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT sarahmarshall processofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT sarahtaki processofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT pennylove processofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT yvonnelaird processofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT mariannekearney processofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT nancytam processofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT louiseabaur processofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT chrisrissel processofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
AT limingwen processofculturallyadaptingthehealthybeginningsearlyobesitypreventionprogramforarabicandchinesemothersinaustralia
_version_ 1724281695362875392