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西非马里农村地区的宿命论与艾滋病认知

Fatalism and HIV/AIDS beliefs in rural Mali, West Africa.

作者信息

Hess Rosanna F, McKinney Dawn

机构信息

Research for Health, Inc. Cuyahoga Falls, OH 44223, USA.

出版信息

J Nurs Scholarsh. 2007;39(2):113-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1547-5069.2007.00155.x.

Abstract

PURPOSE

To examine beliefs about HIV/AIDS of rural Malians and to measure their level of fatalism in context of HIV/AIDS and prevention behaviors.

DESIGN

Descriptive, correlational.

METHODS

An AIDS Knowledge and Beliefs survey and the Powe Fatalism Inventory (PFI)-HIV/AIDS version were administered to a convenience sample of 84 people at three health center maternity clinics in southeastern Mali, West Africa.

FINDINGS

The sample's HIV/AIDS fatalism mean was 9.2 on a 15-point scale, with an internal consistency of .89. Health workers and more educated participants had significantly lower fatalism scores. Fatalism also varied by the combination of gender and ethnicity. People who believed that AIDS was not real, was a punishment from God, was fabricated by the West, was a curse, and that it was taboo to talk about AIDS had higher fatalism means. None of the prevention indicators were significantly related to fatalism scores.

CONCLUSIONS

These rural Malians had a high overall fatalism mean and their beliefs about AIDS based on traditional culture may affect prevention behaviors. More research is needed to understand the influence of fatalism on prevention behaviors.

摘要

目的

考察马里农村居民对艾滋病毒/艾滋病的看法,并衡量他们在艾滋病毒/艾滋病背景下的宿命论程度及预防行为。

设计

描述性、相关性研究。

方法

对西非马里东南部三个保健中心产科诊所的84名便利抽样人员进行了艾滋病知识与看法调查以及宿命论量表(PFI)-艾滋病毒/艾滋病版本调查。

结果

在15分制量表上,样本的艾滋病毒/艾滋病宿命论平均得分是9.2,内部一致性为0.89。卫生工作者和受教育程度较高的参与者宿命论得分显著较低。宿命论也因性别和种族的组合而有所不同。那些认为艾滋病不真实、是上帝的惩罚、是西方编造的、是一种诅咒以及谈论艾滋病是禁忌的人,宿命论平均得分较高。没有一项预防指标与宿命论得分显著相关。

结论

这些马里农村居民的总体宿命论平均得分较高,他们基于传统文化的艾滋病观念可能会影响预防行为。需要更多研究来了解宿命论对预防行为的影响。

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