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聋人和听力障碍者的预防态度与信念。

Preventive attitudes and beliefs of deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals.

作者信息

Tamaskar P, Malia T, Stern C, Gorenflo D, Meador H, Zazove P

机构信息

Medical College of Ohio, Toledo, USA.

出版信息

Arch Fam Med. 2000 Jun;9(6):518-25, discussion 526. doi: 10.1001/archfami.9.6.518.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To investigate the unique health care issues of deaf and hard-of-hearing (D&HH) persons by studying their attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors toward preventive medicine.

DESIGN

A self-administered, cross-sectional survey, written in a format comprehensible to persons whose primary language is American Sign Language.

POPULATION

One hundred forty D&HH persons recruited from southeastern Michigan, Chicago, Ill, and Rochester, NY, and 76 hearing subjects from southeastern Michigan and Rochester.

RESULTS

No significant differences existed between D&HH or hearing persons from different states. However, numerous differences existed between D&HH and hearing persons. Deaf and hard-of-hearing persons were less likely to report receiving preventive information from physicians or the media, and more likely to report receiving it from a Deaf club. They rated the following physician-initiated procedures as less important than hearing persons: discussion of alcohol consumption, smoking, depression, and diet, plus screening for hypertension, hearing loss, and cancer. Deaf and hard-of-hearing persons often considered a preventive procedure important if it was reported performed at their last health maintenance examination. They were less likely to report being asked about alcohol consumption and smoking, or to having been examined for hypertension, cancer, height, and weight. They were more likely to report receiving a hearing examination, mammogram, and Papanicolaou smear. Deaf and hard-of-hearing persons were less likely to report believing that smoking less, exercising regularly, maintaining ideal weight, and regular physical examinations improve health. Differences existed within the D&HH cohort depending on the respondent's preferred language (oral English vs American Sign Language); our sample size was too small for a complete assessment of these differences.

CONCLUSIONS

Deaf and hard-of-hearing persons appear to have unique knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors regarding preventive medicine, and their attitudes are influenced by their personal experiences with physicians. Preventive practices addressed during health visits may differ between D&HH and hearing patients. Further research is needed to clarify the reasons for these differences, including within D&HH subgroups, and to develop effective mechanisms to improve the health care of all D&HH persons.

摘要

目的

通过研究聋人和听力障碍者(D&HH)对预防医学的态度、信念和行为,调查他们独特的医疗保健问题。

设计

一项自我管理的横断面调查,采用美国手语使用者能理解的格式编写。

研究对象

从密歇根州东南部、伊利诺伊州芝加哥市和纽约州罗切斯特市招募的140名聋人和听力障碍者,以及来自密歇根州东南部和罗切斯特市的76名听力正常者。

结果

来自不同州的聋人和听力障碍者与听力正常者之间没有显著差异。然而,聋人和听力障碍者与听力正常者之间存在许多差异。聋人和听力障碍者不太可能报告从医生或媒体获得预防信息,而更有可能报告从聋人俱乐部获得此类信息。他们认为以下由医生发起的程序不如听力正常者认为的重要:关于饮酒、吸烟、抑郁和饮食的讨论,以及高血压、听力损失和癌症的筛查。如果聋人和听力障碍者报告在最近的健康维护检查中进行了某项预防程序,他们通常会认为该程序很重要。他们不太可能报告被问及饮酒和吸烟情况,或接受过高血压、癌症、身高和体重检查。他们更有可能报告接受过听力检查、乳房X光检查和巴氏涂片检查。聋人和听力障碍者不太可能报告相信少吸烟、定期锻炼、保持理想体重和定期体检能改善健康。根据受访者偏爱的语言(英语口语与美国手语),聋人和听力障碍者群体内部存在差异;我们的样本量太小,无法对这些差异进行全面评估。

结论

聋人和听力障碍者在预防医学方面似乎有独特的知识、态度和行为,他们的态度受其与医生的个人经历影响。聋人和听力障碍患者与听力正常患者在健康检查期间涉及的预防措施可能有所不同。需要进一步研究以阐明这些差异的原因,包括聋人和听力障碍者亚组内部的原因,并制定有效的机制来改善所有聋人和听力障碍者的医疗保健。

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