Hay Jennifer L, Zabor Emily C, Kumar Julie, Brennessel Debra, Kemeny Margaret M, Lubetkin Erica I
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York.
Psychooncology. 2016 Sep;25(9):1071-8. doi: 10.1002/pon.4196. Epub 2016 Aug 1.
Greater patient activation, defined as having the knowledge, skills, and confidence to manage one's health, is associated with cancer control behaviors. Cancer risk beliefs may be associated with patient activation, and delineating this relationship could inform cancer control interventions across diverse patient subgroups. This study examines associations between cancer risk beliefs, language preference, and patient activation within a multilingual urban primary care setting.
Patients 18 years and older within a New York City public hospital serving a large proportion of non-native-born Americans were surveyed regarding their cancer risk beliefs and patient activation in Haitian Creole, Spanish, or English based on language preference during a health care visit.
The sample (N = 460) included 150 Haitian Creole speakers, 159 Spanish speakers, and 151 English speakers and was primarily non-White (92%). Most participants (84%) had not been born in the United States. Cancer risk beliefs differed across language preference. Beliefs that cancer could be avoided by minimizing thoughts about cancer risk were significantly higher in Haitian Creole speakers than in others; reported negative emotion when thinking about cancer risk was higher in Spanish and English than in Haitian Creole speakers. These cancer risk beliefs were positively related to patient activation, even when controlling for language preference.
Cancer risk beliefs differ across language preference and are related to patient activation, making them potentially important in cancer control. Consideration of language represents important demographic stratification for understanding the frequency and relevance of different beliefs about cancer and patient activation.
更高的患者自我管理能力,即具备管理自身健康的知识、技能和信心,与癌症控制行为相关。癌症风险信念可能与患者自我管理能力有关,明确这种关系可为不同患者亚组的癌症控制干预提供信息。本研究在多语言城市初级保健环境中考察癌症风险信念、语言偏好与患者自我管理能力之间的关联。
在一家服务大量非美国本土出生美国人的纽约市公立医院中,对18岁及以上患者进行调查,询问他们在医疗就诊期间基于语言偏好,以海地克里奥尔语、西班牙语或英语表达的癌症风险信念和患者自我管理能力。
样本(N = 460)包括150名海地克里奥尔语使用者、159名西班牙语使用者和151名英语使用者,主要为非白人(92%)。大多数参与者(84%)并非在美国出生。癌症风险信念因语言偏好而异。认为通过尽量减少对癌症风险的思考可以避免患癌的信念在海地克里奥尔语使用者中显著高于其他人;在想到癌症风险时报告的负面情绪在西班牙语和英语使用者中高于海地克里奥尔语使用者。即使在控制语言偏好的情况下,这些癌症风险信念与患者自我管理能力呈正相关。
癌症风险信念因语言偏好而异,且与患者自我管理能力相关,使其在癌症控制中可能具有重要意义。考虑语言是理解不同癌症信念和患者自我管理能力的频率及相关性的重要人口统计学分层因素。