Dessio Whitney, Wade Christine, Chao Maria, Kronenberg Fredi, Cushman Linda E, Kalmuss Debra
Stony Brook School of Medicine, Stony Brook University, State University of New York, USA.
Ethn Dis. 2004 Spring;14(2):189-97.
This study describes the prevalence and patterns of use of religion and spirituality for health reasons among African-American women.
Respondents were asked about their use of religion/spirituality for health reasons as part of a larger study of the prevalence and correlates of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) use among women. In 2001, a national survey of 3,172 women, aged 18 and older, was conducted in 4 languages, with over-sampling among African-, Mexican-, and Chinese-American participants. This paper focuses on the sub-sample of 812 African-American women.
Overall, 43% of the African-American women reported using religion/spirituality for health reasons in the past year. Factors significantly associated with the use of religion/spirituality for health reasons included having an income of dollar 40,000-dollar 60,000, an education level of college graduate or more, or being 37-56 years of age; worse health status approached significance. African-American women utilized religion and spirituality most often for serious conditions such as cancer, heart disease, and depression. African-American women who had used religion/spirituality in the past year for health reasons were more than twice as likely to have used some form of CAM, and also more likely to have seen a medical doctor during the year prior to the interview, compared to their counterparts.
Religion and spirituality are associated with health-seeking behaviors of African-American women. The use of religion and spirituality for health reasons warrants additional research, particularly its use for chronic and serious conditions, and its role in the health-seeking behavior of African-American women in conjunction with the utilization of conventional medicine and CAM.
本研究描述了非裔美国女性出于健康原因使用宗教和精神疗法的普遍性及模式。
作为一项关于女性补充和替代医学(CAM)使用的普遍性及其相关因素的大型研究的一部分,研究对象被问及出于健康原因对宗教/精神疗法的使用情况。2001年,对3172名18岁及以上的女性进行了一项全国性调查,调查以4种语言进行,对非裔、墨西哥裔和华裔美国参与者进行了过度抽样。本文聚焦于812名非裔美国女性的子样本。
总体而言,43%的非裔美国女性报告在过去一年中出于健康原因使用宗教/精神疗法。与出于健康原因使用宗教/精神疗法显著相关的因素包括收入在4万美元至6万美元之间、教育水平为大学毕业或更高,或年龄在37至56岁之间;健康状况较差接近显著水平。非裔美国女性最常将宗教和精神疗法用于癌症、心脏病和抑郁症等严重疾病。与未使用宗教/精神疗法的非裔美国女性相比,在过去一年中出于健康原因使用宗教/精神疗法的非裔美国女性使用某种形式的补充和替代医学的可能性高出两倍多,并且在接受采访前一年去看医生的可能性也更大。
宗教和精神疗法与非裔美国女性的健康寻求行为相关。出于健康原因使用宗教和精神疗法值得进一步研究,特别是其在慢性和严重疾病中的使用,以及它在非裔美国女性结合使用传统医学和补充和替代医学的健康寻求行为中的作用。