The Complexities of Managing Gestational Diabetes in Women of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Backgrounds: A Qualitative Study of Women’s Experiences
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design, Setting and Sample Recruitment
2.2. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participants
3.2. Themes
3.2.1. Cultural Beliefs and Obligations Impact Lifestyle Management of Gestational Diabetes
Mostly in our culture people don’t have diabetes—gestational diabetes. I don’t know why, but in my family I’m the first one who have gestational diabetes. Even my mum said we didn’t hear about gestational diabetes. I told her that maybe we don’t do in Pakistan the proper treatment, we don’t do the test and everything…I think here we go on a proper way in Australia, to do all the process and tests…Maybe in Pakistan they don’t worry about these things.
Because my parents are Polish, so they’re also from a background of eat anything, you’re meant to be eating because you’ve got a child, you shouldn’t have to worry about that.
Like I tell my mum, I’ve been diagnosed. She’s like, ‘we didn’t have any of this in the ‘80s. We just ate whatever. Just eat whatever’. I have to say, ‘I’m avoiding salami. I’m avoiding soft cheese’. She’s like, ‘what are you doing? Just eat whatever. We never had these tests.’ So then that’s sort of playing in my mind. Like how do you get out of that when they have no idea but they just had a baby and they weren’t told about anything to do with diabetes.
So my partner’s from cultural—he’s Indian background, so there’s a big belief in don’t cut anything out, keep eating the way you are, eat, eat, eat, sugar, sugar, sugar, or it’s very vegetarian based…Yeah, so culturally, they don’t understand it in a way. So it’s, you’re taking something away from the baby, or blah, blah, blah, and I’d have to try and explain to them, no, I’m not. In a way, it’s just a better lifestyle, a heathier lifestyle.
We must have a curry—curry with bread or curry with rice, something like that. So I just make our own bread for myself. I just went out and make the bread for curry—and something like a soup, chicken soup and tomato soup, something like that.
I had to make myself a separate meal with more veggies because my children are not really—they didn’t like what I was eating, it was all boiled. So, I had to make myself a separate meal.
What I eat gets cooked and everybody else in the family gets to eat that…not that my husband’s complaining, he loves the fact that we’re not having any Indian food…if I had my family over then it would have been a challenge because then we’d have to cook two meals, different for me and different for the elders of the family.
3.2.2. The Relationship between Cultural Foods and Gestational Diabetes Management
The chart was basically not Indian food…There were two Indian ladies, we both asked what should we eat as breakfast and then dinner. Basically, we have to avoid all bread, like the roti, that is the main thing we have to avoid.
Probably being Indian I would say our cultural food involves a lot of flatbread which is high on sugar. So, I would probably just say that cut down on the flatbread, eat more veggies…Instead, for example, if you take three flatbreads with the veggies, cut down to one, eat more veggies.
I was eating the same food that I was eating earlier...I just reduced the quantities. If I’m taking rice three cups, then I’m just taking rice one cup and instead of that I’m substituting it for vegetables or meat or whatever that I can eat without increasing the sugar levels.
I had to pretty much chuck vegetarian out the door, because it had a lot of lentils and rice and, unfortunately, it’s a lot of carbohydrates in it. So I went more of a protein-based.
There are lots of people who still stick to culture…lots of butter and things like that…people don’t want to change their culture.
3.2.3. Gestational Diabetes Education Lacks Cultural Awareness and Sensitivity
When they were saying ’you won’t be able to have white rice’, the Indian ladies were like, ’oh, what am I going to have instead?’ You could see them just going, ‘well, that’s the base of our meals.’
See I love Jasmine rice, we eat a lot of rice with every meal. So the dietitian said to go on Basmati rice. I don’t like Basmati rice.
Yes, so I just want to say that the nutritionists’ behaviour and the way they talked to us, especially when we are from other backgrounds. We don’t have any good English so it’s hard to understand what they tell us or what we are telling them, so it’s too hard. But the way that they managed these difficulties, and they’re always good to us, nice, very kind, it was very helpful, and I hope they continue.
You might be part of the same cultural groups and organizations, but you still might eat actually different, so you need that different sort of advice.
I went through the Aboriginal Birthing Program and they were a great support. I’m not too sure if that was something they could also pick up? Because it can be a bit daunting…there’s going to be other people there….a one-on-one for Aboriginal people would be better.
Maybe bring a support person, there’s a lot of information. That sort of thing would’ve been good because I think—particularly if you’re in your own home, like having someone who’s involved in the cooking know what’s going on, what’s the dos and don’ts, would’ve been hugely helpful.
Yeah, like he [husband] came along to all my appointments with me and took the time to understand what this diagnosis really meant, because we didn’t have any clue about this gestational diabetes as we do not have any family member had this diabetes before. So we were really unsure about what these things are, so he was really interested in understanding this diagnosis…he really did these changes in our daily lifestyle as well, because not only for me, he also changes his lifestyle, food journey, so it was really helpful, because eating alone for different food is really difficult.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Oxlad, M.; Whitburn, S.; Grieger, J.A. The Complexities of Managing Gestational Diabetes in Women of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Backgrounds: A Qualitative Study of Women’s Experiences. Nutrients 2023, 15, 1053. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15041053
Oxlad M, Whitburn S, Grieger JA. The Complexities of Managing Gestational Diabetes in Women of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Backgrounds: A Qualitative Study of Women’s Experiences. Nutrients. 2023; 15(4):1053. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15041053
Chicago/Turabian StyleOxlad, Melissa, Sharni Whitburn, and Jessica A. Grieger. 2023. "The Complexities of Managing Gestational Diabetes in Women of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Backgrounds: A Qualitative Study of Women’s Experiences" Nutrients 15, no. 4: 1053. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15041053
APA StyleOxlad, M., Whitburn, S., & Grieger, J. A. (2023). The Complexities of Managing Gestational Diabetes in Women of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Backgrounds: A Qualitative Study of Women’s Experiences. Nutrients, 15(4), 1053. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15041053