Garrett R E, Zyzanski S J, Alemagno S A
Department of Family Medicine and Practice, University of Wisconsin.
Fam Med. 1990 Jan-Feb;22(1):14-9.
A pilot study was undertaken to explore the effects of geographic migration and exposure to new cultural values and attitudes on rates of physician office visits in a Puerto Rican population in a major Northeastern urban area. A cross-sectional survey study of an immigrant community was performed, using a questionnaire developed to assess the degree of immigrants' adaptation to the dominant culture, self-perceived health status, levels of stress and social support, and attitudes toward Western medical care. A convenience sample of 93 respondents was obtained. Analysis of the data showed that adaptation to the dominant culture, as measured in this study, is as good an independent predictor of high levels of physician office visitation as self-reported health status. In addition, it has a small but significant effect on perceived health. These results suggest that further exploration of the effect of cultural adaptation on health behaviors would be productive for clinicians and health resource managers.
开展了一项试点研究,以探讨地理迁移以及接触新文化价值观和态度对美国东北部一个主要城市地区波多黎各人群看医生就诊率的影响。对一个移民社区进行了横断面调查研究,使用了一份专门设计的问卷,以评估移民对主流文化的适应程度、自我感知的健康状况、压力水平和社会支持,以及对西方医疗保健的态度。获得了93名受访者的便利样本。数据分析表明,在本研究中衡量的对主流文化的适应,与自我报告的健康状况一样,是高看医生就诊率的良好独立预测指标。此外,它对感知健康有微小但显著的影响。这些结果表明,进一步探索文化适应对健康行为的影响对临床医生和卫生资源管理者来说将是有成效的。