Tolliver Sophia O, Hefner Jennifer L, Tolliver Starling D, McDougle Leon
From The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center Department of Family Medicine, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus (SOT, JLH, SDT, LM); The Division of Healthcare Management and Policy, College of Public Health, The Ohio State University, Columbus (JLH).
J Am Board Fam Med. 2019 Nov-Dec;32(6):944-947. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2019.06.190168.
African American (AA) women have reported hair maintenance as a barrier to regular exercise; however, to our knowledge, this study is the first to identify primary care provider thoughts, attitudes, beliefs, and knowledge regarding hair as a barrier to increased physical activity among AA females.
A 13-question electronic survey was sent via email to 151 clinicians working within a department of family medicine's 8 ambulatory clinics within a large urban academic medical center.
A total of 62 primary care clinicians completed the survey, which is a response rate of 41%. The vast majority of respondents (95%) sometimes/often engage in discussions with AA female patients regarding physical activity. However, 76% of respondents have never included a hairstyling or maintenance assessment in that discussion and only 34% noted being comfortable discussing this topic. Among a list of potential barriers to exercise, hair maintenance/scalp perspiration was rarely endorsed as important by clinicians.
This study highlights a need for increased education among primary care providers regarding AA hair care and maintenance practices as a barrier to increased physical activity in AA women. If specific barriers to increasing healthy habits among AA women are to be addressed, there must be a baseline knowledge of hair care and maintenance barriers, an understanding of the strong influence of cultural norms and practices as it relates to physical activity and exercise, and an increased comfortability when engaging in difficult cross-cultural conversations to ultimately improve health outcomes in AA females.
非裔美国女性报告称头发护理是定期锻炼的一个障碍;然而,据我们所知,本研究首次确定了初级保健提供者对于头发作为非裔美国女性增加身体活动的障碍的想法、态度、信念和知识。
通过电子邮件向一家大型城市学术医疗中心家庭医学科8个门诊诊所工作的151名临床医生发送了一份包含13个问题的电子调查问卷。
共有62名初级保健临床医生完成了调查,回复率为41%。绝大多数受访者(95%)有时/经常与非裔美国女性患者讨论身体活动问题。然而,76%的受访者在该讨论中从未进行过发型或护理评估,只有34%的人表示愿意讨论这个话题。在一系列潜在的运动障碍中,临床医生很少认为头发护理/头皮出汗是重要的障碍。
本研究强调,需要加强对初级保健提供者的教育,使其了解非裔美国人的头发护理和保养做法是阻碍非裔美国女性增加身体活动的一个因素。如果要解决非裔美国女性养成健康习惯的具体障碍,就必须对头发护理和保养障碍有基本的了解,理解文化规范和做法对身体活动和锻炼的强烈影响,并在进行艰难的跨文化对话时更加自在,以最终改善非裔美国女性的健康状况。