Original Research

Culturally tailored support to enhance DASH diet adherence in midlife and older African American women

  • Angela Groves 1 *
  • Yasir Mehmood 2
  • Candace E.M. Ryan 3
  • 1. Bronson School of Nursing, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan, United States
  • 2. College of Osteopathic Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States
  • 3. College of Nursing, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, United States
* Correspondence:

Abstract

Objective: This qualitative study examined the cultural food preferences and resources of African American women with self-reported hypertension to guide the development of a culturally tailored Dietary Approaches to Stopping Hypertension (DASH) manual.
Methods: Eleven women from a church congregation in the Southwest United States participated in two focus groups. Transcripts were analyzed using content analysis with independent coding and consensus validation.
Results: Six themes and four subthemes emerged: (1) providing perspectives on diet among older African American women; (2) understanding awareness and education needs regarding the DASH diet with subthemes of nutrition-skills and literacy-level adaptation; (3) community disparities in access to healthy foods with subthemes of affordability and nutrition and thrifty nutrition; (4) navigating tradition by addressing challenges of southern cooking heritage; (5) exploring the use of diverse home appliances in meal preparation;and (6) enhancing the DASH manual with tailored insights.
Conclusions: Findings emphasize the need for culturally tailored, literacy-sensitive, and resource-conscious materials to promote DASH adherence. A tailored manual may reduce structural and cultural barriers, improve dietary practices, and address hypertension disparities among African American women.

Keywords: African American women; Culturally tailored intervention; DASH diet; Dietary adherence; Food access; Health disparities; Hypertension; Qualitative research
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Article Info
Published In
Vol. 15, No. 12
2025
Received
Sep 24, 2025
Accepted
Nov 27, 2025
Published
Dec 21, 2025
How to cite
Groves A, Mehmood Y, Ryan C. Culturally tailored support to enhance DASH diet adherence in midlife and older African American women. Journal of Nursing Education and Practice. 2025;15(12):50-58.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.