Family eating and activity habits: a comparison of nutrition among nurses and non-health professionals in the Arab ethnic minority in Israel.
- Author:
Aia BUSNAN
1
;
Miriam THEILLA
2
;
Anat AMIT AHARON
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Comparative Study
- Keywords: Arab ethnic minority; Family eating and activity habits; Food literacy; Nurse; Self-assessed nutrition
- MeSH: Humans; Israel; Female; Male; Arabs/psychology*; Adult; Cross-Sectional Studies; Nurses/statistics & numerical data*; Middle Aged; Feeding Behavior; Minority Groups/statistics & numerical data*; Exercise; Nutritional Status; Family; Young Adult
- From:Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2025;30():94-94
- CountryJapan
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
BACKGROUND:Obesity and diabetes constitute significant health concerns within the Arab population in Israel. The study examines food literacy and self-assessed nutritional variables, which may explain family eating and activity habits among the Arab ethnic minority in Israel. The study examines these variables among professional nurses, who are expected to advocate for healthy behaviors within the population, compared to non-health professionals.
METHODS:A cross-sectional study compared two groups: professional nurses and non-health professionals. A closed, structured self-report questionnaire (with five sub-sections) assessed food literacy, self-assessed nutrition, and family eating and activity habits. Data was collected between January and May 2022. A MANCOVA was used to compare the research variables among nurses and non-health professionals, and η2 was calculated as the effect size. A multiple linear regression was conducted to examine the variables explaining families' eating and activity habits. The model's significance and variance explained (R2) were calculated.
RESULTS:The study included 213 Israeli Arab participants (103 nurses and 110 non-health professionals). Nurses showed poorer self-assessed nutrition and family eating/activity habits than non-health professionals. Regression analysis identified profession (β = -0.39, p < 0.001), gender (β = 0.22, p < 0.001), BMI (β = -0.22, p < 0.001), food literacy (β = 0.20 p < 0.001), and self-assessed nutrition (β = 0.30, p < 0.001) as significant predictors of family eating and activity habits. The model was significant (p < 0.001) and explained 38.0% of the variance.
CONCLUSION:Despite their health education background, Arab nurses reported suboptimal nutritional behaviors and unhealthy lifestyles that impact their family lifestyle practices, potentially hindering their health and limiting their effectiveness as health role models. Policymakers should develop ongoing nutrition health promotion programs tailored to the Arab nurses and Arab ethnic minority communities in Israel.
