Henderson Linda Carson
College of Public Health, American Indian Diabetes Prevention Center, University of Oklahoma, 755 Research Parkway, Suite 150, Oklahoma City, OK 73104, USA.
J Cross Cult Gerontol. 2010 Dec;25(4):303-16. doi: 10.1007/s10823-010-9128-4.
The purpose of this study was to examine belief systems about diabetes in American Indian elders, and the effects of culture on care-seeking, adherence, and diabetes self-care. Health belief theory predicts that care-seeking and medical adherence are a function of culturally mediated beliefs that result in behaviors that effect health status. In order to elicit cultural meanings of diabetes, in-depth interviews were conducted with an intensity sample of 30 American Indian diabetic elders (55+). Two models of diabetes were identified, divergent in terms of 1) health behaviors, and 2) cultural identification. One model was characterized by delayed care-seeking, and a non-valuing of adherence to diabetes self-care. Non-adherence to medical recommendations was perceived as being socially desirable, because adherence placed the elder outside their peer group. The second model was characterized by early care-seeking and improved adherence to diabetes self-care. These divergent models of diabetes, in which care-seeking, diabetes self-care, and adherence vary as a function of cultural immersion, has implications for health education and disease management and may contribute substantially to health disparities.
本研究的目的是考察美国印第安老年人关于糖尿病的信念体系,以及文化对寻求医疗服务、依从性和糖尿病自我护理的影响。健康信念理论预测,寻求医疗服务和医疗依从性是文化介导信念的函数,这些信念会导致影响健康状况的行为。为了引出糖尿病的文化意义,对30名55岁及以上的美国印第安糖尿病老年人进行了强度抽样的深入访谈。确定了两种糖尿病模型,在以下两方面存在差异:1)健康行为;2)文化认同。一种模型的特点是延迟寻求医疗服务,不重视糖尿病自我护理的依从性。不遵守医疗建议被认为在社会上是可取的,因为依从性会使老年人脱离他们的同龄人群体。第二种模型的特点是早期寻求医疗服务和改善糖尿病自我护理的依从性。这些不同的糖尿病模型中,寻求医疗服务、糖尿病自我护理和依从性随文化融入程度而变化,这对健康教育和疾病管理具有启示意义,可能会极大地导致健康差距。