Brown William Michael, Consedine Nathan S, Magai Carol
Centre for Cognition and Neuroimaging School of Social Sciences and Law, Brunel University West London, Uxbridge Middlesex, United Kingdom.
J Immigr Minor Health. 2006 Oct;8(4):347-58. doi: 10.1007/s10903-006-9005-y.
The current study was designed to investigate the relations between time spent in the United States and breast cancer screening in a large sample (N=915) of ethnically diverse immigrant women living in New York City. Previous research among Hispanic women has suggested that acculturation positively influences health beliefs and preventive health behaviors. However, research has not yet extended to other growing immigrant groups, including women from Haiti and the English-speaking Caribbean, and has not tested whether time spent in the United States differentially impacts breast screening across groups that are known to vary in their health beliefs. As expected, time spent in the United States was associated with a greater number of mammograms and clinical breast exams. Importantly, these relations held even when controlling for (a) age, income, education, marital status; (b) morbidity, health insurance, physician's recommendation, physical exams; and (c) ethnicity. Moreover, time spent in the United States interacted with being Haitian to predict the number of clinical breast exams. Even though Haitians were less likely to utilize breast cancer screening overall, time spent in the United States had a stronger effect on the number of clinical breast exams for Haitian women. Results are discussed in terms of the ethnic-specificity of health beliefs, how they may change over time and their implications for preventive health behaviors.
本研究旨在调查居住在纽约市的大量不同种族移民女性样本(N = 915)在美国停留的时间与乳腺癌筛查之间的关系。此前对西班牙裔女性的研究表明,文化适应对健康观念和预防性健康行为有积极影响。然而,研究尚未扩展到其他不断增长的移民群体,包括来自海地和讲英语的加勒比地区的女性,也尚未测试在美国停留的时间是否会对已知健康观念不同的群体的乳房筛查产生不同影响。正如预期的那样,在美国停留的时间与更多的乳房X光检查和临床乳房检查相关。重要的是,即使在控制了以下因素后,这些关系仍然成立:(a)年龄、收入、教育程度、婚姻状况;(b)发病率、健康保险、医生建议、身体检查;以及(c)种族。此外,在美国停留的时间与海地裔身份相互作用,以预测临床乳房检查的次数。尽管海地人总体上较少进行乳腺癌筛查,但在美国停留的时间对海地女性临床乳房检查次数的影响更大。研究结果从健康观念的种族特异性、它们如何随时间变化以及它们对预防性健康行为的影响等方面进行了讨论。