Impact of breast cancer on Asian American and Anglo American women

被引:114
作者
Kagawa-Singer, M [1 ]
Wellisch, DK [1 ]
Durvasula, R [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Sch Publ Hlth & Asian Amer Studies, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
关键词
breast cancer; Asian-American women; Anglo-American women; pilot study;
D O I
10.1023/A:1005314602587
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
This pilot study constitutes the first exploration of the impact of breast cancer on Asian American women. Three hypotheses guided this study: (1) Asian American women would choose breast conserving therapy and breast reconstruction at a lower rate than the Angle American women due to cultural differences in body image, (2) Asian American women with breast cancer would express psychological distress somatically and Angle American women would express distress emotionally, and acculturation levels of the Asian American women would modify the expressions of distress such that women with high acculturation will express distress more emotionally and less acculturated women would express distress more somatically, and (3) Asian American women would seek assistance for psychosocial problems at a significantly lower rate than Angle women. Ethnicity, age, and levels of acculturation were found to be significant variables that had to be considered simultaneously. The three hypotheses were only partially supported: (1) Asian American women chose breast conserving therapy and adjuvant therapy at a significantly lower rate than the Angle American women, (2) Contrary to the hypothesis, somatization did not appear to be a dominant form of symptom presentation for Asian American women regardless of level of acculturation, and (3) Asian American women sought professional assistance for psychosocial problems at a significantly lower rate than Anglo women. Asian American women reported using different modes of help-seeking behavior for emotional concerns and receiving different sources of social support than the Angle American women. Cultural interpretations of the findings are offered to explain the differences in the physical, emotional, and social responses to the breast cancer experience of Asian American women compared with the Angle Americans, and notably between the Chinese-and Japanese Americans as well. The findings of this study warrant more refined exploration in order to improve the medical, psychological and social outcomes for Asian American women with breast cancer.
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页码:449 / 480
页数:32
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