Social and cultural factors are related to perceived colorectal cancer screening benefits and intentions in African Americans

被引:0
作者
Jason Q. Purnell
Mira L. Katz
Barbara L. Andersen
Oxana Palesh
Colmar Figueroa-Moseley
Pascal Jean-Pierre
Nancy Bennett
机构
[1] Washington University in St. Louis,Health Communication Research Laboratory
[2] Ohio State University,undefined
[3] University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry,undefined
[4] University of California,undefined
[5] Davis,undefined
来源
Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2010年 / 33卷
关键词
Colorectal cancer; Screening; African American; Culture;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Models that explain preventive behaviors, such as colorectal cancer (CRC) screening, do not account for social and cultural factors relevant to African Americans. This exploratory study examined the relationship between socio-cultural factors (e.g., traditional acculturative strategy, group-based medical mistrust, physician ethnicity, and group-level perceptions of susceptibility) and perceived benefits, perceived barriers, and CRC screening intentions among African Americans (N = 198; Age: M = 59.7, SD = 9.9; 65% female; 44% household income $50,000+). Hierarchical multiple regression was used to test the following models with perceived benefits, perceived barriers, and screening intentions as the outcomes: (a) traditional acculturative strategy × medical mistrust; (b) physician’s ethnicity × medical mistrust; (c) group susceptibility × medical mistrust; and (d) group susceptibility × traditional acculturative strategy. Results revealed that perceiving high group susceptibility while being both more culturally traditional and less mistrustful was associated with more perception of screening benefits. Greater intention to be screened was associated with perceiving high group susceptibility while having a more traditional cultural orientation and low levels of mistrust in those with African American physicians. These results suggest that it may be beneficial to include these social and cultural factors in behavioral interventions to increase CRC screening among African Americans.
引用
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页码:24 / 34
页数:10
相关论文
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