Korean J Community Nutr.  2012 Oct;17(5):589-602. 10.5720/kjcn.2012.17.5.589.

Diet-related Behaviors, Perception and Food Preferences of Multicultural Families with Vietnamese Wives

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Food and Nutrition, College of Human Ecology, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea. snhan@snu.ac.kr
  • 2Multicultural Human Ecology Center, Research Institute of Human Ecology, College of Human Ecology, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

The Korean society has gone through a dramatic change in its population, with rapidly increasing number of multicultural families through international marriages since 1990s. This study investigated the differences between multicultural families and Korean families in three areas related to dietary behaviors: diet-related behaviors and perception, and food preferences. A cross-sectional analysis was performed in 500 Koreans from Korean families and 104 couples from the multicultural families with Vietnamese wives. More subjects from multicultural families grew up in the countryside, received less education and also had lower income than the subjects from Korean families. Multicultural families ate traditional Korean meals more often at home and dined out less often than Korean families. The multicultural families focused more attention on nutritional aspects of their diets than Korean families. The Vietnamese wives in multicultural families favored Vietnamese foods but they rarely ate those foods in Korea despite an easy accessibility to Vietnamese ingredients. In conclusion, the multicultural families had more traditional Korean dietary patterns than Korean families, which could have been influenced by their socioeconomic factors. Further research with a quantitative analysis is needed in future studies to understand the effect of dietary patterns on nutritional status and quality of life in multicultural and Korean families.

Keyword

multicultural families; Vietnamese female marriage immigrants; diet-related behaviors; diet-related perception

MeSH Terms

Asian Continental Ancestry Group
Cross-Sectional Studies
Diet
Family Characteristics
Food Preferences
Humans
Korea
Marriage
Meals
Nutritional Status
Quality of Life
Socioeconomic Factors
Spouses

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