Hart Patricia L
Acute Care Nursing, WellStar Health System, Marietta, GA 30127, USA.
J Cardiovasc Nurs. 2005 May-Jun;20(3):170-6. doi: 10.1097/00005082-200505000-00008.
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of death in American women and is a major cause of morbidity. The American Heart Association (AHA) reports that in the year 2000, 515,661 women died from all categories of cardiovascular disease. An estimated 254,630 women suffer a myocardial infarction annually. Women diagnosed with CHD experienced greater morbidity and mortality than men. Women's perceptions of their risk for heart disease can greatly influence their decision-making process in regard to healthcare decisions. The general public still perceives heart disease as primarily a health problem for men. Evidence shows that women perceive breast cancer as a greater risk than CHD. These misperceptions may lead women to underestimate their risk for CHD and fail to seek early interventions to prevent unnecessary morbidity and mortality. The purpose of this article is to report the results of an integrative review of nursing research related to women's perceptions of risks for heart disease. CINAHL, Medline, EBSCO host, and Proquest databases were searched for nursing research conducted between the years of 1985 and 2002. Key search terms were women, heart disease, coronary artery disease, perceptions, risk factors, and health promotion behaviors. Study selection was limited to the first author being a nurse researcher. Twenty articles and dissertations were retrieved that met the key search terms. Eleven articles were excluded because the first author was not a nurse researcher. This integrative review includes 5 articles and 4 dissertations. Results revealed that women's perceptions of their CHD risks are underestimated, that health-promoting behaviors are not influenced by risk perceptions, that society imposes barriers that prevent participation in health promotion behavior, and that communication between women and their healthcare providers is lacking.
冠心病(CHD)是美国女性死亡的主要原因,也是发病的主要原因。美国心脏协会(AHA)报告称,2000年有515,661名女性死于各类心血管疾病。据估计,每年有254,630名女性发生心肌梗死。被诊断为冠心病的女性比男性有更高的发病率和死亡率。女性对自身心脏病风险的认知会极大地影响她们在医疗保健决策方面的决策过程。公众仍然认为心脏病主要是男性的健康问题。有证据表明,女性认为乳腺癌的风险比冠心病更大。这些误解可能导致女性低估自己患冠心病的风险,并且未能寻求早期干预措施以预防不必要的发病和死亡。本文的目的是报告对与女性对心脏病风险认知相关的护理研究进行综合综述的结果。检索了CINAHL、Medline、EBSCOhost和Proquest数据库,以查找1985年至2002年间进行的护理研究。关键检索词为女性、心脏病、冠状动脉疾病、认知、风险因素和健康促进行为。研究选择仅限于第一作者为护士研究人员的情况。检索到20篇符合关键检索词的文章和论文。11篇文章被排除,因为第一作者不是护士研究人员。这篇综合综述包括5篇文章和4篇论文。结果显示,女性对自身冠心病风险的认知被低估,健康促进行为不受风险认知的影响,社会存在阻碍参与健康促进行为的障碍,并且女性与其医疗保健提供者之间缺乏沟通。