The African urban food environment framework for creating healthy nutrition policy and interventions in urban Africa
Date
2021
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
PLOS ONE
Abstract
This study developed, validated, and evaluated a framework of factors influencing dietary
behaviours in urban African food environments, to inform research prioritisation and inter vention development in Africa. A multi-component methodology, drawing on concept map ping, was employed to construct a framework of factors influencing dietary behaviours in
urban Africa. The framework adapted a widely used socio-ecological model (developed in a
high-income country context) and was developed using a mixed-methods research
approach that comprised: i. Evidence synthesis consisting of a systematic review of 39
papers covering 14 African countries; ii. Qualitative interview data collected for adolescents
and adults (n = 144) using photovoice in urban Ghana and Kenya; and iii. Consultation with
interdisciplinary African experts (n = 71) from 27 countries, who contributed to at least one
step of the framework (creation, validation/evaluation, finalisation). The final framework
included 103 factors influencing dietary behaviours. Experts identified the factors influencing
dietary behaviours across all the four levels of the food environment i.e. the individual,
social, physical and macro levels. Nearly half (n = 48) were individual-level factors and just
under a quarter (n = 26) were at the macro environmental level. Fewer factors associated
with social (n = 15) and physical (14) environments were identified. At the macro level, the
factors ranked as most important were food prices, cultural beliefs and seasonality. Factors
ranked as important at the social level were household composition, family food habits and
dietary practices. The type of food available in the neighbourhood and convenience were
seen as important at the physical level, while individual food habits, food preferences and
socioeconomic status were ranked highly at the individual level. About half of the factors (n
= 54) overlap with those reported in an existing socio-ecological food environment framework developed in a high-income country context. A further 49 factors were identified
that were not reported in the selected high-income country framework, underlining the
importance of contextualisation. Our conceptual framework offers a useful tool for research
to understand dietary transitions in urban African adolescents and adults, as well as identification of factors to intervene when promoting healthy nutritious diets to prevent multiple
forms of malnutrition.
Description
Research Article