Today Venice is providing 12,700 prepared meals a week – not including the fresh fruits and vegetables initiative, which has distributed more than 34,000 pounds of produce and reached more than 1600 households over the past 12 months.
The things we eat, and how we eat them, and whom we eat them with, carry psychological associations in any human society. Vanessa Fernandez, a nutrition specialist with Venice Family Clinic, explains the particular emotional resonances around food for Latinos, and how those feelings contribute to the specific health issues faced by that community.
Food is fun, and food is culture, right? How you express yourself -- it comes from food. In America we have birthday cake, but in other countries, the birthday cake looks very different. Breakfast looks different.
My diabetic patients are used to eating ‘bread’ in the morning. You might think toast, but in the Mexican community bread is not just a slice of toast with butter, it’s like a pound cake or a pastry. So when somebody says, ‘I had coffee with bread in the morning,’ actually it’s a whole pastry or Danish or sweetbread. Culturally, they just call it bread.
You ask them, ‘How many tortillas did you eat?’ Someone who didn’t grow up eating them might have one or two. But my patients who grew up with it, they have 10 tortillas a meal. That is part of their upbringing.
Somebody who is diabetic, that is the first thing you want to focus on. Culturally, it is hard to shake.
When you want to address health equity, or address differences in nutritional access, you definitely want to associate it with food -- if it’s a happy time, or a sad time.
For the most part, people want to enjoy food. Especially in the Latin community, they associate food with a good time. The better the food tastes, the better we are, the more fun we are having.
Food is compensating for a lot. If somebody is overstressed or feels overweight, the natural inclination is to eat something that tastes good. If somebody is diagnosed with diabetes, do they take steps toward a diet? Their inclination is, ‘Well, I am going to die of something.’ It is so comforting, the association with food, that everything is going to be all right.
My family is Colombian. We are very Latin. So much of that cultural experience is embedded in us. You give somebody something that tastes good to make them feel better … it is hard to give that up.
Healthy food is associated with a bad diet, with a bad time. It’s associated with limitations and restrictions. You are on a diet, you are compensating for the lack. It doesn’t feel like the natural thing to do, to eat healthy, because it’s not fun.
It takes skills to navigate. A lot of behavioral health is involved. Healthy eating is associated with stigma, with the limitations.
Or: it’s not cost effective. How do I feed my family of five or seven? Do I give them a healthy salad? When I can just go to the fried chicken place, and everybody is full and happy, versus me having to spend more time in the kitchen, and the kids are learning remotely? The challenges seem overbearing.
In the Latin community, it’s difficult. Homes are run by women; their health takes a back seat. They are trying to make ends meet. Health becomes a bigger issue, not just for themselves but for their whole family.