Abstract

ABSTRACT Objective: To investigate the meanings attributed to healthy eating by consumers of a street market in the region called Recôncavo da Bahia, Bahia, Brazil. Methods: Phenomenology-based ethnography to understand the meanings attributed by those consumers. Information was collected through participant observation documented in a field diary and in-depth interviews. Interviews were conducted with seven people who were visitors and/or worked at the street market. In the analytical process, the following significant concepts related to healthy eating were systematized: "fruits and vegetables represent healthy eating"; "safe food: it has to be clean", and "foods that do the body good". Results: The meanings attributed to healthy eating are revisited daily and are related to individuals' life experiences; new meanings derive from intersubjective constructions. Based on the interviews, it was observed that re-signification was a constant process, marked by events that influence the respondents to change their eating habits such as diseases, aging, information received by health care professionals, and media reports. Healthy eating was also represented by the hygienic-sanitary quality of foods and the lack of strict control over everyday food choices. Conclusion: We highlight the importance of this discussion in the scientific field and governmental bodies, as well as among health care professionals aiming at a better understanding of the different concepts of healthy eating.

Highlights

  • Today, due to the spread of noncommunicable diseases associated with foods, such as obesity, hypertension, and diabetes among others, and in view of the difficulty in changing eating habits, there is a great deal of information available in the scientific literature as well as empirical information on the importance of healthy eating for health promotion [1]

  • The meanings attributed to healthy eating are revisited daily and are related to individuals’ life experiences; new meanings derive from intersubjective constructions

  • It was observed that re-signification was a constant process, marked by events that influence the respondents to change their eating habits such as diseases, aging, information received by health care professionals, and media reports

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Summary

Introduction

Due to the spread of noncommunicable diseases associated with foods, such as obesity, hypertension, and diabetes among others, and in view of the difficulty in changing eating habits, there is a great deal of information available in the scientific literature as well as empirical information on the importance of healthy eating for health promotion [1] Even if these notions are present differently in the discourse of health care professionals, in the media, in public spaces, and in the domestic scenarios of everyday life, it is necessary to obtain information about the meanings of healthy eating for certain social groups to contribute to the actions undertaken by health care professionals [2,3].

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