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Adapting health promotion interventions for ethnic minority groups: a qualitative study

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Raj Bhopal CBE, Professor Martin White

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Abstract

Adaptation of health interventions has garnered international support across academic disciplines and among various health organizations. Through semi-structured interviews, we sought to explore and understand the perspectives of 26 health researchers and promoters located in the USA, UK, Australia, New Zealand and Norway, working with ethnic minority populations, specifically African-, South Asian- and Chinese-origin populations in the areas of smoking cessation, increasing physical activity and healthy eating, to better understand how adaptation works in practice. We drew on the concepts of intersectionality, representation and context from feminist, sociology and human geography literature, respectively, to help us understand how adaptations for ethnic groups approach the variable of ethnicity. Findings include (i) the intersections of ethnicity and demographic variables such as age and gender highlight the different ways in which people interact, interpret and participate in adapted interventions; (ii) the representational elements of ethnicity such as ancestry or religion are more complexly lived than they are defined in adapted interventions and (iii) the contextual experiences surrounding ethnicity considerations shape the receptivity, durability and continuity of adapted interventions. In conclusion, leveraging the experience and expertise of health researchers and promoters in light of three social science concepts has deepened our understanding of how adaptation works in principle and in practice for ethnic minority populations.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Liu JJ, Davidson E, Bhopal R, White M, Johnson M, Netto G, Sheikh A

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Health Promotion Journal

Year: 2016

Volume: 31

Issue: 2

Pages: 325-334

Print publication date: 01/06/2016

Online publication date: 05/01/2015

Acceptance date: 01/01/1900

ISSN (print): 0957-4824

ISSN (electronic): 1460-2245

Publisher: Oxford University Press

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/heapro/dau105

DOI: 10.1093/heapro/dau105


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