Graduate Center for Gerontology.
African American Dementia Outreach Partnership, Lexington.
Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord. 2019 Oct-Dec;33(4):354-358. doi: 10.1097/WAD.0000000000000335.
Statistics suggest that African Americans have a disproportionately high prevalence of Alzheimer disease (AD), yet are less likely to enroll in AD clinical trials than white individuals. Although research has previously identified various barriers to participation, relatively little is known about how to overcome these barriers and engage African American individuals in AD research. The purpose of this study is to better understand how African Americans conceptualize brain health and their ability to influence healthy brain aging.
Three African American community advocates each facilitated a small group of African American participants over 8 to 10 sessions of a photovoice process involving discussion and sharing of images focused on brain health. Sessions were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim and photographs were uploaded.
Participants recognized a diversity of what brain health can mean and indicated an interconnectedness between brain health and its influences. Key factors that were identified by group members as key to brain health included lifestyle factors, activity, and engagement and nature, resiliency, and positivity.
These emic insights into perceptions of brain health may represent important foci for targeted messaging strategies to promote brain health and research engagement within the African American population.
统计数据表明,非裔美国人患阿尔茨海默病(AD)的比例过高,但参与 AD 临床试验的可能性却低于白人。尽管先前的研究已经确定了参与的各种障碍,但对于如何克服这些障碍并使非裔美国人参与 AD 研究,人们的了解相对较少。本研究旨在更好地了解非裔美国人如何理解大脑健康以及他们影响健康大脑衰老的能力。
三位非裔美国社区倡导者每人都通过照片声音过程促进了一小群非裔美国参与者,该过程涉及讨论和分享重点关注大脑健康的图像。会话被录音并逐字转录,照片被上传。
参与者认识到大脑健康的多样性,并指出大脑健康及其影响之间的相互联系。小组成员确定的对大脑健康至关重要的关键因素包括生活方式因素、活动和参与以及自然、韧性和积极性。
这些对大脑健康的看法可能代表了在非裔美国人群中促进大脑健康和研究参与的有针对性的信息传递策略的重要焦点。