Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2010 Nov 1;43(7):633-47. doi: 10.1002/eat.20755.
The study aim was to identify and describe health consumer perspectives on social barriers to care for eating disorders in an ethnically diverse sample.
We conducted an exploratory secondary analysis of qualitative data comprising transcripts from semi-structured interviews with past and prospective consumers of eating disorder treatment (n = 32). Transcripts were inputted into NVivo 8 for coding, sorting, and quantifying thematic content of interest within strata defined by ethnic minority and non-minority participants. We then examined the influence of key social barriers-including stigma and social stereotypes-on perceived impact on care.
The majority of respondents (78%) endorsed at least one social barrier to care for an eating or weight concern. Perceived stigma (or shame) and social stereotyping-identified both within social networks and among clinicians-had adversely impacted care for 59% and 19% of respondents, respectively.
Social barriers to care for eating and weight related concerns may be prevalent in the U.S. and impact both ethnic minority and non-minority health care consumers.
本研究旨在从人种多样性的样本中识别并描述健康消费者对进食障碍护理社会障碍的看法。
我们对包括过去和未来的饮食失调治疗消费者(n=32)半结构化访谈的转录本在内的定性数据进行了探索性二次分析。将转录本输入 NVivo 8 进行编码、分类,并对少数民族和非少数民族参与者定义的各层内感兴趣的主题内容进行量化。然后,我们研究了主要社会障碍(包括耻辱感和社会刻板印象)对护理的感知影响。
大多数受访者(78%)认可了至少一种与饮食或体重相关的护理社会障碍。感知到的耻辱感(或羞耻感)和社会刻板印象——无论是在社交网络中还是在临床医生中,分别对 59%和 19%的受访者的护理产生了不利影响。
在美国,与饮食和体重相关的护理社会障碍可能很普遍,影响少数民族和非少数民族的医疗保健消费者。