Tortolero-Luna Guillermo, Byrd Theresa, Groff Janet Y, Linares Adriana C, Mullen Patricia D, Cantor Scott B
The University of Texas-Houston School of Public Health, Houston, Texas., The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2006 Jul-Aug;15(6):774-85. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2006.15.774.
To assess how English language use by Hispanic women affects their preferences for participating in decision making and information seeking regarding medical care.
The study included 235 Hispanic women aged 35-61 years participating in a larger multicenter study, the Ethnicity, Needs, and Decisions of Women (ENDOW) Project. Participants were recruited from community settings and primary care public health clinics. Bilingual (English and Spanish speaking) interviewers asked participants questions about demographic characteristics, health status, reproductive history, menopausal status, access to healthcare, experience with hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and hysterectomy, outcome expectations about HRT and hysterectomy, medical decision making, and social support. Using univariate and multivariate analyses, we assessed the relationships between the participants' preferences for participating in decision making and information seeking, their language use, and other covariates of interest.
Overall, the participants expressed a strong desire for information about and participating in medical decisions. However, they expressed a lower preference for participating in decisions related to use of HRT compared with the desire for engaging in decision involving invasive medical procedures (hysterectomy and cholecystectomy) and high blood pressure management. Increased use of English language was significantly associated with preferences for participating in medical care decision making, in general (p < 0.001), and with information seeking (p = 0.044). Decreased use of English language was associated with a lower desire for participating in medical care decision making.
Increased use of English language may influence Hispanic women's preferences for participating in medical decisions and their information-seeking behavior.
评估西班牙裔女性使用英语的情况如何影响她们参与医疗护理决策和信息寻求的偏好。
该研究纳入了235名年龄在35至61岁之间的西班牙裔女性,她们参与了一项更大规模的多中心研究——女性的种族、需求与决策(ENDOW)项目。参与者从社区环境和初级保健公共卫生诊所招募。双语(英语和西班牙语)访谈者询问参与者有关人口统计学特征、健康状况、生殖史、绝经状态、获得医疗保健的机会、激素替代疗法(HRT)和子宫切除术的经历、对HRT和子宫切除术的结果期望、医疗决策以及社会支持等问题。我们使用单变量和多变量分析来评估参与者参与决策和信息寻求的偏好、她们的语言使用情况以及其他感兴趣的协变量之间的关系。
总体而言,参与者表达了对获取医疗决策信息和参与医疗决策的强烈愿望。然而,与参与涉及侵入性医疗程序(子宫切除术和胆囊切除术)及高血压管理的决策的愿望相比,她们对参与HRT使用相关决策的偏好较低。一般来说,英语使用频率的增加与参与医疗护理决策的偏好显著相关(p < 0.001),与信息寻求也显著相关(p = 0.044)。英语使用频率的降低与参与医疗护理决策的较低愿望相关。
英语使用频率的增加可能会影响西班牙裔女性参与医疗决策的偏好及其信息寻求行为。