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Mexicans
and
Central Americans
Chapter 9
Introduction
Latinos are the
largest nonEuropean ethnic
group in the US
 Not a single ethnic
group
 Rich cultural
heritage
 Reflected in foods

◦ European and native
Indian
Mexico
Northernmost Latin American country
 Part of North America
 Varied geography
 Climate from arid desert to tropical
lowlands
 Most Mexicans of mixed Indian and
Spanish ancestry
 Official language is Spanish

History in the US

Chicanos
◦ Born in the US or those who immigrated
and are US citizens

Braceros
◦ Work here legally but remain Mexican
citizens

Unauthorized migrants
◦ Those who enter the country illegally

Terms may vary regionally
Current Demographics

32 million Chicanos and Braceros
◦
◦
◦
◦

11.5 million born in Mexico
Accounts for 59% of the Latino population
Primarily live in California and Texas
Since 1990 has become more nationwide
11 – 12 million unauthorized migrants
◦ Majority from Mexico

Latino neighborhoods: Barrios
Socioeconomic Status
Live in Latino neighborhoods
 Maintain ethnic identify

◦ La Raza
Some become completely assimilated
 Others become bicultural

Worldview
Proudly maintain their ethnic identity
 75% of Mexican descent are are
Roman Catholic

◦ Nearly all practice religion
 If not Catholic will be Protestant
◦ Virgen de Guadalupe
Strong faith
 Believe they have no control over their
own fate

The Chicano Family



Most important social unit
Well-being of the family comes before
the needs of the individual
Male is head of the household
◦ Machismo: Pride and self-worth a man feels
when fulfilling his obligations and duties to his
family and community


Wife is homemaker
Children are cherished
◦ Taught to share and work together

Often live with extended family
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices




Elements of Indian supernatural rituals
European folk medicine
Many use traditional cures
Health is a gift from God
◦ Illness due to outside forces
◦ Might be being punished by God

Prayer always appropriate
◦ Interventions of the saints
◦ Virgin Mary or St. Francis
◦ May make pilgrimages to their shrines
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices: Hierarchy of Healers

Senora or abuela
◦ Family health experts
◦ Home remedies
◦ OTC

Yerbero
◦ Herbalist

Sobador
◦ Massage therapist

Partera
◦ Midwife who may also treat young children

May purchase traditional herbal remedies, homeopathic
cures and amulets at botánicas
◦ May also purchase therapeutic items at religious fiestas
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices: Hierarchy of Healers






Curandero or Curandera
Lay healer who intervenes in multiple
dimensions, e.g., physical and spiritual
Powers may be God-given at birth, learned or
received
Broad range of complaints including the
supernatural
Faith is crucial - prayer is primary treatment
May counteract spells/hexes from a brujo
◦ Someone who works on behalf of the devil
◦ Use milagros or exvotos
 An effigy of the afflicted body part
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices

Illness believed to be due to
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
Excessive emotion
Dislocation of organs
Magic
Imbalance in hot or cold
Anglo disease
 Pneumonia or appendicitis

Treatment is based on the cause
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices: Susto



Due to excessive emotion
Physical, physiological, psychological
Espanto
◦ Type of susto due to being frightened by a ghost
◦ Soul leaves the body


Susto is serious and may be treated by a
curandero
Nervios is caused by susto
◦
◦
◦
◦
Seen in adult women
Cannot be cured by traditional healer
Crying, sleep problems, headache, etc.
Chronic condition related to health behaviors
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices: Bilis
From too much rage
 Excess bile spills into the blood


Envidia
◦ Caused by envy
◦ May affect a person’s success
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices: Caida de la mollera






Fallen fontanel in infants
From a fall, yanking the nipple out of a
baby’s mouth too quickly or holding the baby
vertical at too young an age
Believed the palate drops preventing the
infant from feeding
Wear tight caps to prevent
Salt poultices or olive oil followed by a dip in
water to treat
May hold baby upside down and gently
shake, pull the hair, suck the fontanel, press
palate to reposition the fontanel
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices: Mal de ojo






Evil eye
Supernatural origins
Children especially vulnerable
Caused when someone casts a strong,
admiring look on another person
Believed to result in death if not treated
quickly
Cleansing ritual used including sweeping
an egg over the ill individual
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices

Mal aire
◦ Bad air or wind
◦ May cause headaches and colds

Mal puesto
◦ Witchcraft
◦ Swelling, trembling, paralytic twitching
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices: Empacho
Digestive ailment
 Nausea, gas, weakness
 Eating too many hot or cold foots or
hot-cold imbalance
 A ball or wad of food adhered to the
stomach
 Herbal teas
 Curandero may pray, pinch the spine
and massage the stomach

Traditional Food Habits





Influences
Indian (mostly
Aztec)
Spanish
Some French and
Viennese
Islamic culinary
traditions via Spain
Traditional Food Habits:
Ingredients and Common Foods
Chile peppers
 Beans
 Cocoa
 Corn
 Tomatoes

Traditional Food Habits:
Aztec Foods
Corn the staple grain
 Legumes, fruits, vegetables
 Turkeys and dogs for meat

◦ Some game
No consistent source of fat or oil
 Average Indian ate mostly vegetarian
diet of corn and beans

Traditional Food Habits:
Spanish Contributions







Cinnamon
Garlic
Onions
Rice
Sugar cane
Wheat
Distillation
◦ Alcoholic beverages
◦ Mescal, tequila

Hogs
◦ Added needed
protein and lard
◦ With indigenous
ingredients produce
the classic flavors
and foods of Mexico
 Corn tortillas with pork
filling, etc
Traditional Food Habits: Staples

Typical Mexican
diet
◦
◦
◦
◦
Corn
Squash
Beans
Varied fruits,
vegetables, meats
◦ Chile peppers
◦ Very little variety
Traditional Food Habits: Staples

Breads
◦ Tortillas
 Traditional flat bread of
Mexico
 Corn is heated in lime
 Pulverized
 Made into flour
 Masa harina
 Then into dough
 Cooked on griddle with
a little lard
Why the lack of pellagra in a corn
based diet?

Pellagra
◦ Niacin deficiency disease
◦ Prevalent in areas with corn based diet

When corn kernels are prepared for
masa harina, the alkaline lime solution
used to soften them releases the
niacin that was bound to a protein
Traditional Food Habits: Staples

One-dish meals are typical
◦ Caldos (soups)
◦ Sopas-secas (casseroles)
◦ Gordos (similar to dumplings)

Meats
◦ Grilled or fried
 Carne asada
◦ Stewing or braising helps tenderize tough
cuts of meat
◦ Use all parts of the animals
 Chorizo
Traditional Food Habits: Staples

Famous for stuffed foods
◦ Flautas, tacos, enchiladas, tamales,
quesadillas, and burritos
 Fill tortillas with anything
◦ Vegetables




Part of main dish
Substantial garnish
Potatoes, greens, tomatoes, onions
Chile peppers
Traditional Food Habits: Staples

Sweets
◦
◦
◦
◦

Sugar cane
Dried or candied fruits and vegetables
Sugared fruit or nut pastes
Flan
Coffee is most common beverage
◦ Milk consumed infrequently

Beer is most important alcoholic
beverage
◦ Tequila, mescal, whiskey
Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations: Mexican Plains
Northern and Central part of Mexico
 Natives were seminomadic
 Corn, beans, squash, greens
 Tuna (Cactus fruit)
 Nopales (Young cactus leaves)
 Piñons (pine nuts)
 Pozoles (Hominy based stews)

Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations


Mexican plains (Northern)
Spanish introduced
◦ Longhorn cattle
◦ Dairy cows
◦ Wheat



Beef and wheat frequently consumed
Raise goat and sheep
Barbacoa
◦ Cow/kid/lamb heads and/or cheeks prepared
this way
Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations

Baja Peninsula
◦ Fish

Cheese
◦ Queso Fundido
Wheat/wheat
tortillas
 Buñuelos

◦ Popular dessert
◦ Serve with café con
leche

Aguamiel
◦ Honey water
◦ From Maguey
cactus
◦ Distill fermented
aquamiel to make
pulque
◦ Distill pulque to
make mescal
◦ Distill mescal to
make tequila
Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations: Tropical Mexico
Hot lowlands, tropical forests
Seafood and freshwater fish
Tomatillos, chayote squash, onions,
jicama
 Bananas and starchy plantains
 Carambola (Star fruit), cherimoya
(custard apple)
 Soursop, guava, zapote
 Avacados, guacamole
 Mamey (plum)
 Yucca (cassava or manioc)



Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations

Chile Peppers
◦ Over 90 types
Smaller the chile
the hotter it is
 Develops more
heat as it ripens
 Heat intensifies
when it is dried
 Contain capsaicin

Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations: Yucatan
Isolated region
 Many Mayans
 Dense mountainous jungles
 Use banana leaves to wrap and steam
foods

◦ Called píbil

Salbutes
◦ Similar to a tostada
◦ If stuffed, called a Panucho
Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations

Citrus Fruits
◦ Juices used for marinade
◦ Pickling
◦ Orange and lime

Achiote
◦ Recado colorado
◦ Paste to coat foods
◦ Called annatto in the US

Seafood and eggs are common
Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations: Southern Mexico



Similar to Yucatan as more tropical and
Indian-influenced
Poultry, goat, pork
Chapulines
◦ Grasshopper found in the corn fields
◦ Pan-fried with chiles, garlic, salt, lemon juice



Beverages are hot chocolate, coffee,
Atole: thin cornmeal and milk gruel
Ice cream, ices, flan, popular desserts
Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations: Southern Mexico

Cacao trees
◦ Use lots of chocolate in sweet and savory
dishes

Moles
◦ From Aztec word “molli” meaning “sauce
with chiles”
◦ Use unsweetened chocolate
◦ Are rich, complex sauces used as a base for
stews or poured on top of food
◦ Chiles, tomatoes, nuts, raisins, sesame
seeds, avocado leaves also common
ingredients
Meal Composition and Cycle:
Daily Patterns







4 – 5 daily meals
Most meals eaten at home or family style
Breakfast: pastries, fruit, café con leche
Late morning: brunch of tortillas, eggs,
meat, beans, wheat rolls, sweet bread,
fruit, coffee, hot chocolate
Lunch: soup, rice, beans, salad, dessert
Afternoon snack: sweets w/ coffee or
hot chocolate, siesta afterwards
Dinner: light supper often leftovers
Snacking


Frequent from morning to midnight
Antojitos – “little whims”
◦ Tostadas
Food vendors
 Pastelerías

◦ Coffee, pastries, chocolates
Open air markets
 Cantinas

◦ Serve botanas
 Cocktail foods or appetizers
Special Occasions
Sundays
 Family celebrations

◦ Weddings
◦ Baptisms
◦ Quinciñeras
 Girls 15th birthday

Holidays

Festive foods
include:
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
Tamales
Moles
Turkey
Arroz con leche
Pastel de tres leches
Special Occasions:
Dia de los Santos Reyes
Three Kings Day
 January 6th
 Common gifts are new shoes.
 Celebrated with the Rosca de Reyes.

◦ Raisin studded, ring shaped loaf of bread
Ceramic doll baked inside represents
Baby Jesus.
 Person getting Baby Jesus must give
a party on Candelaria Day Feb 2nd

Special Occasions
Lent
 Capirotada

◦ A holiday bread pudding
Días de los Muertos: Days of the Dead
 November 1 and 2
 Large feast honoring the deceased
 Pan de muerto

◦ Bread decorated with skull and crossbones


Mold skulls and skeletons from sugar paste
Altars set up for the dead with food, alcohol,
etc.
Special Occasions: Christmas
Posadas
 Christmas festivities
 Piñatas
 Buñuelos
 Salad of fruits, nuts and beets served
on Christmas Eve

Role of Food and Etiquette in
Mexican Society
Meal planning done by wife, served by
wife or servants
 Eat everything served, ok to leave some
on plate
 Share food
 Do not reject anything offered
 Host begins meal with “¡Buen
provecho!”
 Fork remains in left hand, knife in right
 Keep hands above table
 Pass dishes to left
 Do not leave table early

Therapeutic Uses of Food

Hot/Cold Theory
◦ Disease is caused by an imbalance between
hot and cold
◦ From Arab system brought to Mexico by the
Spanish

Applied only to
◦ Foods
◦ Prevention
◦ Treatment

Does NOT encompass moral or social
beliefs
Therapeutic Uses of Food
Based on the concept that the world’s
resources are limited and must remain
in balance
 People must stay in harmony with the
environment
 Hot is strength
 Cold is weakness

Therapeutic Uses of Food

When applied to food:
◦ Proximity to the sun
◦ Method of preparation
◦ How the food is thought to affect the body

Meals balanced between hot and cold
foods are thought to be health promoting
◦ Rice (hot)
◦ Soup (made with hot and cold)
◦ Beans (cold)

Unbalanced meals may cause illness
Therapeutic Uses of Food
Hot foods
 Alcohol
 Aromatic beverages
 Beef
 Chiles
 Corn husks
 Oils
 Onions
 Pork
 Radishes
 Tamales

Cold foods
 Citrus fruits
 Dairy products
 Most fresh vegetables
 Goat
 Tropical fruits
 Hot or cold depending
on prep
 Beans
 Corn/rice products
 Sugary foods
 Wheat products

Therapeutic Uses of Food


Illnesses treated with a diet rich in foods
of the opposite classification
Hot illnesses
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
Treat with a “cold” substance (food/drink)
Pregnancy
Hypertension
Diabetes
Acid indigestion
Susto
Ojo
Bilis
Therapeutic Uses of Food


“Cold” illnesses Treat with a “hot”
substance
Hot illnesses
 Pneumonia
 Empacho
 Colic

Sour foods thought to thin the blood
◦ Avoided by menstruating women
 Thought to increase blood flow

Acidic foods
◦ May cause menstrual cramps
Therapeutic Uses of Food



Latinos more likely than white to
consider certain foods herbal medicines
Home remedies are common
Chamomile
◦ Colic, menstrual cramps, anxiety

Mint and anise tea
◦ Nausea, gas, diarrhea, colid

Garlic
◦ Yeast infections of the mouth, toothache
Therapeutic Uses of Food

Hypertension
◦ Garlic, passion flower, or linden flowers
◦ Sapodilla tree leaves in teas
 Act as a sedative

Diabetes
◦
◦
◦
◦
Sage
Trumpet flower
Prodigiosa leaves and flowers
Indian plantains, papayas, bitter gourds, aloe
vera juice, prickly pear cactus
◦ May have potent diuretic or hypoglycemic
properties
Contemporary Food Habits in the United
States: 4 Regional Variations


Texas
Modified Mexican food into US dishes – Tex
Mex
◦ Tamale pie, nachos
◦ Combo plates
◦ Drunken pudding – whiskey sauce for BBQ
kebabs

Some foods retained Mexican heritage
◦ Chili con carne



Anchos, jalapeños
Cumin
Ground beef instead of shredded
4 Regional Variations, continued
New Mexico
 New Mexico chile

◦ Mildly pungent
◦ Red or green

Simple sauces
◦ Only ground red chili pepper, water, garlic,
oregano, and salt to taste
◦ Use pork instead of lamb, goat or beef
4 Regional Variations, continued



Sonora
Mexican state of Sonora and Arizona
Prefer mild
◦ Often drop “chile” such as in carne verde

Beef and a traditional dried beef jerky,
machaca
◦ Stuffed foods


Large wheat tortillas
May be the original home of burritos
◦ Deep-fried version, chimichangas
4 Regional Variations, continued
California border
 Neither side can claim
 Mixture of products

◦ Hamburgers with jalapenos on the side
◦ Burritos filled with refried beans, carne
asada and French fries
Market for Latino foods is increasing
 Appreciation of authentic regional fare
is increasing

Adaptations of Food Habits:
Ingredients and Common Foods


Recent immigrants, those who live near
the border and migrant workers continue
traditional foods
Source of fat varies
◦ Less acculturated
 Whole milk and fat added during food prep
◦ More acculturated
 Fast food, snacks, added fat

Less acculturated
◦ More fruit, beans, rice
◦ Less sugar and sugar sweetened beverages
Generational changes between those
born in Mexico and those born in US
 Greatest dietary changes occurred
between the 1st generation born in
Mexico and the 2nd generation, born
in the United States
 Between 2nd and 3rd generation less
significant.
◦ Exception was consumption of corn
tortillas (decreased 69% between first and
second generations, an additional 30%
drop between 2nd and 3rd generations
Generational changes between those
born in Mexico and those born in US
Reduced consumption of legumes,
most vegetables, rice, and pasta
 More breads, cereals, margarine,
mayo, butter, potato chips and French
fries
 Whole milk preferred among Mexican
born

◦ Low-fat among US born
Generational changes between those
born in Mexico and those born in US

Soda intake high in all generations
◦ US born prefer diet

Alcohol intake increases
◦ Especially beer consumption in males
Sweet and carbonated beverage
intake increases in US
 Baked goods are generally purchased
 Extra income spent on meat

Meal Composition and Cycle:
Daily Patterns





Traditional foods preferred for most
meals
Vegetables are served in soups or stews
Fruits are a snack or dessert
Chicanos adopt American meal pattern
(3 meals/day)
Milk a superfood for children
◦ Adults may not consume at all
◦ About 50% of adults are lactose intolerant
Meal Composition and Cycle:
Daily Patterns – Recent Immigrants

May continue to grill and fry outdoors
◦ May not understand how to use the oven

May avoid canned or frozen foods
◦ Unsure of how to use them
Cooking at home is still popular
 Spend more money on flour and dry beans
 Shop at small ethnic stores or convenience
stores with fewer healthy options
 Eat out more frequently than any other ethnic
group in the US

Special Occasions

Sundays
◦ Still have tamales, enchiladas
◦ Labor intensive foods served

Easter
◦ No preference

Christmas
◦ Tamales

Thanksgiving
◦ Turkey and mashed potatoes
Special Occasions

Mexican Independence Day
◦ Foods that are red, white, and green
◦ Mariachis, traditional clothing

Cinco de Mayo
◦ Meaning has been lost
◦ Very popular in US

Mexica Aztec New Year’s Day
◦ Beginning of the Aztec solar year
◦ Emphasizes indigenous Indian identity
Nutritional Status: Intake


Health statistics difficult to determine
Life expectancy for Mexican Americans similar to
that of whites
◦ Misreporting may be an issue

LBW infants and infant mortality lower for
Mexican Americans than for the total population
◦ See Cultural Controversy

95% breastfeed their infants in the first week of
life
◦ May be given formula, water, sweetened herbal teas
early


Iron deficiency anemia a problem
Baby bottle tooth decay (BBTD) a problem
Nutritional Status: Intake

Highest component scores on the
USDA Healthy Eating Index (HEI)
◦ Good compliance with MyPyramid recs
◦ Those born in Mexico have slightly higher
scores
◦ Appears to decrease with acculturation

Low protein consumption combined
with lower intake of iron and vitamin C
may result in low hemoglobin levels in
young children and pregnant women
Nutritional Implications
Traditional diet contains sources of:
◦ Vitamin A
◦ Vitamin C
◦ Thiamin
◦ Niacin
◦ B-6
◦ Folate
◦ Phosphorus
◦ Zinc
◦ Fiber
 Mexican Americans consume less of these
 Inadequate income or lack of traditional ingredients may
limit consumption of these nutrients
Nutritional Implications

High prevalence of obesity
◦ 36% of men
◦ 45% of women
◦ Also in children



Low socioeconomic status
Leisure-time physical inactivity
Cultural ideal weight is higher
◦ Latina women believe weight gain after
marriage is normal
◦ Extra weight associated with health and wellbeing
Nutritional Implications

Diabetes rate 2x higher
◦
◦
◦
◦
May have greater insulin resistance
Complications are more prevalent
Death rates from diabetes 64% higher
Comorbidities of heart disease, angina,
hypertension, arthritis, etc., are high
◦ High rates of metabolic syndrome
 Leads to type 2 diabetes and heart disease
Nutritional Implications
CVD number one cause of death
 Lower rates of

◦ Hypertension
◦ Dyslipidemia

Higher rates of
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
Ischemic stroke
Intracerebral hemorrhages
Gall Bladder disease
Dental caries
Alcohol intake in men
Counseling
Access to biomedical care may be
limited
 Income may restrict doctor visits
 35% do no have health insurance
 Not comfortable speaking English
 Feel God or fate determines health

◦ Unwilling to take preventive measures
Counseling
High context
Non-confrontational
Warm, dignified relationship is most
effective
 Touching with a handshake
 Maintain eye contact
 Have less personal space than
Americans
 Present-oriented
 Polychronistic



◦ Appointment times may be problematic
Counseling
Men may not acknowledge illness
 May continue working
 Modesty and privacy valued
 Many use home remedies
 Most health beliefs and practices do
not interfere with treatments

Counseling: Exceptions
Diabetes and hypertension treatment with
botanicals
 Empacho treated with lead or mercury based
meds
 Caída de la mollera has been associated with
severe diarrhea and dehydration

◦ Failure to thrive may be a concern

Tea made of wormwood for diarrhea
◦ Toxic ingredient in absinthe

Dried rattlesnake powder
◦ Source of botulism and salmonella

Home remedy for infants made from honey
◦ Botulism
Counseling







Family participates in health care
Consult members in decision making
Gaining family support is beneficial
Nutrition intervention and advice may be
perceived as an accusation of
inadequacy to the women
Children may speak English well and
translate in the market
In-depth interviews are crucial
Familiarity with Spanish needed
Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras,
Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama
CENTRAL AMERICANS
History of Central Americans in
the US


No data prior to 1960’s
First group
◦
◦
◦
◦

Often listed with South Americans
Well-educated professional men
Women coming for temporary domestic jobs
Largely urban residents
Second group
◦ Refugees from El Salvador, Guatemala,
Nicaragua
◦ Known as “foot people” as they walked to
the US
◦ Younger, poorer, less educated
Current Demographics
Exact number unknown due to illegal
immigration
 Most in California, Texas, Florida
 Largest groups: El Salvadorans,
Guatemalans, Hondurans, Nicaraguans
 Few from Costa Rica, Belize and
Panama
 Identity may be more of race than
country of origin

◦ Ladino: Mixed Spanish and Indian heritage
◦ Indian Campesinos: Peasants
Socioeconomic Status


Data limited as combined with South
American data
First wave immigrants now a middle
class population with above average
income and education
◦ Graduate from high school in numbers higher
than that of whites

More recent immigrants typically fall
below poverty level and with lower
education levels
◦ Belize, Costa Rica have better levels
◦ Panama have the best numbers
Worldview


Latino communities will have areas
specific to one ethnic group
Guatemalans
◦ May prefer to be called Chapines



Mayan communities very likely to keep
traditional beliefs and practices
Nicaraguans adapt more to pan-Latino
community
Garifuna – black Caribs from Belize and
Honduras
Worldview: Religion

Most are Roman Catholic
◦ Guatemalans observe Catholic practices
but may maintain Mayan beliefs
◦ Participation in the US declines as
Mayans are dependent on sacred
locations
Pentecostal Church
 Churches that offer traditional Central
American social activities plus worship
are successful

Worldview: Family



Highly value family and extended kinship
Father is head of household and provider
Children are carefully controlled
◦ Especially girls

Roles of men and women change in the
US
◦ Women may be more easily employed

Disintegration of the family unit has been
a problem
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices

Good health preserved by
◦ Good diet with consumption of fruits and
vegetables
◦ Fresh air
◦ Regular hours
◦ Guatemalans and Panamanians
◦ Exercise
◦ Don’t get too thin
A balance between the spiritual and social
world
 Health is a gift of God
 Prayer used to restore harmony

Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices

Nicaraguans believe in witchcraft
◦ Brujos or brujas
 Can assume shape of animals
 Have power to cure illness

Guatemalans
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
Illness caused by outside forces
Satan sends disease to punish unbelievers
Sickness due to witchcraft
Curanderos, sobadores
Jeberos (herbalists)
Espiritistas (treat witchcraft with prayer)
Naturalist doctors or naturopaths
May call in priests
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices



Balance of hot and cold
Disrupted by sudden exposure to
extremes in temperature or strong
emotions
Folk conditions
◦ Bilis and Cólera
 Anger, general distress, leads to stroke
◦ Mal de ojo
◦ Susto and Cólera lead to high blood pressure
◦ High blood pressure
 From living at too high an altitude
 Having too much blood
Traditional Health Beliefs and
Practices
Nicaraguans extensively use herbal
remedies
 Guatemalans believe strength
maintained through quantity and
quality of person’s blood

◦ Emergence of foot items that are “strong”
or “health-promoting”
◦ OTC drugs are used but considered weak
◦ Medications and herbs often brought by
others to new immigrants
Traditional Food Habits:
Ingredients and Common Foods

Native Indian dishes
◦ Highland regions

Spanish influence
◦ Lowland region

Eastern coast
◦ Caribbean Islander

Northern nations
◦ Similar to Mexico

Southern area
◦ Europe and Africa
Traditional Food Habits: Staples
Mayan foundation was corn and
beans
 Supplemented with

◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦

Squash
Tomatoes
Chiles
Tropical fruit
Cocoa
Some game
Rice now a staple
Traditional Food Habits: Beans
Beans consumed daily
 Black beans in Guatemala
 Red beans elsewhere
 Simmered w/ spices
 Pureed
 Fried
 With rice
 Gallo pinto in Nicaragua

◦ Red beans and rice fried with onion
Traditional Food Habits


Corn eaten as tortillas
Enchiladas are like tostadas
◦ Mixtas in Guatemala

Pupusas in El Salvador
◦ Stuffed tortillas
◦ Fried and served with pickled cabbage

Tamales
◦ Nactamal in Nicaragua
◦ Black tamales in Guatemala on special
occasions

Empanadas
◦ Small turnovers
Traditional Food Habits: Starch
French bread is popular
 Coconut bread

◦ A specialty on the Caribbean seacoast

Rice
◦ Fried before boiling
◦ Cooked with coconut milk
◦ Served as pancakes in Costa Rica
Traditional Food Habits

Soups and stews
◦ May include fruit or fruit juices



Fruits and vegetables numerous
Coffee and Hot chocolate
Tiste
◦ Nicaraguan favorite made with roasted corn,
cocoa powder, sugar, cod water and cracked
ice


Beer
Boj, Venado
◦ Fermented sugar cane
Traditional Food Habits:
Regional Variations
Belize and Honduras use coconut milk
 El Salvador often fries food
 Guatemala uses achiote

◦ Known as annatto in the US
◦ Mild seasoning
Nicaragua uses sour orange, sweet
peppers, mint
 Costa Rica uses lots of seasonings
 Panamanian fare very international

Meal Composition and Cycle
Beans and corn eaten at every meal
 Rice is common
 Queso Blanco or meat
 Wealthier areas include soup, meat,
fish or poultry, tortillas or bread,
substantial garnishes, maybe
appetizers and dessert
 Iguana is popular

Special Occasions

Focused on Catholic religious days
◦
◦
◦
◦
Christmas
Easter
Lent
Saints’ days
 Including All Saint’s Day
Sundays
 Ceremonial occasions

Etiquette



Similar to Mexico
Eat when host says “¡Buen provecho!”
Most eat with fork in left hand and knife in
right
◦ Nicaraguans may eat American style
◦ Fork in right hand, knife in left and switch






Hands above the table, wrists on the edge
Bread or tortillas placed on side of plate
May use tortilla to scoop up small bits of food
Dishes passed to left
Leave nothing on your plate
Take small portions and ask for seconds
Therapeutic Uses of Foods



Hot-cold theory
May also balance wet-dry
Guatemalan Americans believe diarrhea
is caused by hot weather
◦ Alleviated by cold drinks
◦ Will avoid ice cubes in hot weather


Panamanians may avoid cold foods
when sick
Both will avoid fatty foods and highly
spiced dishes when sick
Therapeutic Uses of Foods

Herbal remedies and teas popular
◦ Manzanilla (chamomile)
 improves circulation, cramps, flu
◦ Banana leaf and mint
 Digestion and regularity
◦ Rosa de Jamaica (hibiscus)
 Respiratory illness, diarrhea, UTI
◦ Papaya leaf
 Gastritis, laxative
Therapeutic Uses of Foods

Lime, fig leaf, grapefruit
 Anxiety and relief of stress

Avocado, garlic, ginseng, and
valleriana
◦ Remedies for hypertension and diabetes
among Panamanians.

Coca leaves
◦ Source of cocaine
◦ Used medicinally in some areas
Contemporary Food Habits in the
US:
Adaptations of Food Habits





Low rates of assimilation
Traditional foods readily available
Few new foods added
Some report diet has declined since coming
to US
Guatemalan refugees
◦ If a food is tasty and does not cause stomach
discomfort, it must be good to eat.
◦ High intake of candy, soft drinks, and chips noted


Milk may be avoided
Some foods discarded due to taste and/or
texture
Nutritional Status: Nutritional Intake


Data is limited
May arrive with deficiency diseases if in
refugee camp
◦ Especially children under age 5

Infectious illnesses common
◦ Tuberculosis
◦ Parasites

Endemic infections
◦ Chagas’ heart disease from a parasite
◦ Cyclosporiasis is an infection from a protozoa
◦ Sickle Cell Anemia
Nutritional Status: Nutritional Intake
Infant mortality rates are below average for
whites
 No excessive low birth weight
 Breastfeeding considered healthy but
impractical

◦ Used as supplement to formula for first 2 – 3
years


Overweight in children double
Pesticide or herbicide poisoning
◦ Problem with farm workers
◦ When labor codes are not enforced
◦ Mishandling of dangerous products
Counseling
Access to biomedical care may be
difficult
 Many uninsured
 Polychronistic
 Present oriented
 View health from day to day with little
control
 Concept of scheduled appointments
unfamiliar

◦ Little interest in arriving on time
Counseling





Touching used to communicate feelings
Direct eye contact when speaking,
downcast when listening
Don’t point with fingers or feet
Have less personal space than most
Americans
High context
◦ Calm, measured voice and emotional
restraint

Respectful, warm, caring speaking style
best
Counseling: Cultural based
descriptions of symptoms

Weak heart
◦ Palpitations or dizziness;

Weak stomach
◦ Indigestion

Weak nervous system
◦ Headaches or insomnia

Anemia associated with weak blood,
cured by “eating iron”
Counseling: Cultural based
descriptions of symptoms:
Guatemalans

Identify susto and nervios as illnesses
◦ If not treated, thought to cause diabetes

Believe injections are most effective
treatment
◦ more potent than pills
Some fear the “chemicals” used in
biomedicine.
 Treatment is successful if symptoms
are alleviated

Counseling
Most important emotional support from
family
 Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder among
refugees
 As assimilation into other Latino
communities is common, practitioner
needs to be aware of cross-cultural
exchanges of health beliefs and
practices
 In-depth interview is crucial
 May need to obtain information from
family and community experts
