Department of Ambulatory Care, Lincoln Medical Center-NYC H+H, 234 East 149th Street, Bronx, NY, 10451, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, Lincoln Medical Center-NYC H+H, 234 East 149th Street, Bronx, NY, 10451, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2019 Feb;6(1):197-206. doi: 10.1007/s40615-018-0514-x. Epub 2018 Aug 16.
To study the knowledge, perception, and behaviors among hypertensive African-Americans in South Bronx, New York, to elucidate any gaps that could explain their poor blood pressure control.
Cross-sectional qualitative study on African-American participants with essential hypertension, on single or combined oral antihypertensive regimen. Three focus groups were presented with open-ended questions on topics including cardiovascular disease knowledge, perception, and behaviors. A total of 18 data collection tools were used. Concepts formulated were categorized into dominant themes. A sample size of 21 participants was attained based on the saturation point related to emerging common themes.
Six dominant themes identified were unhealthy diet, stress, patient-physician relationship, medication non-compliance, decreased physical activity, and hypertension complications. The most dominant was unhealthy diet with self-identified barriers such as poor food selection, family tradition, economical cost, will-power, food taste, and accessibility to healthier food. Regarding medication adherence, participants recognized trust was a determining factor that has been negatively reinforced by previous experiences with their healthcare providers especially when they were not perceived as knowledgeable. Participants have also felt they have been influenced by historic events in their health decision-making process.
The South Bronx African-American population has some feelings that are valid and not simply misconceptions. Some of them are historically related, gaps in knowledge influenced by culture and traditions, and barriers to healthy behaviors enhanced by economic status, lack of will-power, physical limitations, and stress from daily living. A physician partnership with this African-American community to improve trust, raise awareness, facilitate, and change in behavior that could help address blood pressure control and prevent cardiovascular disease.
研究纽约南布朗克斯区高血压非裔美国人的知识、观念和行为,以阐明可能导致其血压控制不佳的任何差距。
对接受单一或联合口服降压药物治疗的原发性高血压非裔美国患者进行横断面定性研究。向 3 个焦点小组提出了关于心血管疾病知识、观念和行为等主题的开放式问题。共使用了 18 种数据收集工具。所形成的概念分为主要主题。根据与新出现的常见主题相关的饱和点,确定了 21 名参与者的样本量。
确定了 6 个主要主题,包括不健康饮食、压力、医患关系、药物依从性差、体力活动减少和高血压并发症。最主要的是不健康饮食,参与者自我识别的障碍包括食物选择不佳、家庭传统、经济成本、意志力、食物味道和更健康食物的可及性。关于药物依从性,参与者认识到信任是一个决定因素,而之前与医疗保健提供者的经历,特别是当他们被认为缺乏知识时,对信任产生了负面影响。参与者还感到他们的健康决策过程受到历史事件的影响。
南布朗克斯的非裔美国人群体有一些合理的感受,而不仅仅是误解。其中一些是历史相关的,知识差距受到文化和传统的影响,而健康行为的障碍则受到经济状况、意志力不足、身体限制和日常生活压力的影响。医生与这个非裔美国社区合作,以改善信任、提高认识、促进和改变行为,这可能有助于控制血压和预防心血管疾病。