School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Biomedical library, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
J Adv Nurs. 2021 Sep;77(9):3600-3617. doi: 10.1111/jan.14804. Epub 2021 Feb 22.
To understand and identify cultural factors influencing the self-care practices of African immigrants living with chronic illness in countries outside Africa.
The influence of cultural factors on self-care is relatively unexplored in African immigrants with non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
Systematic Mixed Studies review.
PubMed, Psych Info, Embase, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Anthropology Plus and Sociological Abstract computerized databases. No limit was placed on publication date.
Results-based convergent design was used. The Mixed Method Appraisal Tool was used to evaluate the studies. Quantitative studies were synthesized narratively while qualitative studies were synthesized using thematic synthesis.
We identified 251 articles and nine fulfilled our inclusion criteria. The studies were published between 2006 and 2019, with six qualitative and three quantitative studies. Studies were conducted in the United States, Australia, Sweden, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. Most studies examined the influence of culture on self-care of diabetes (n = 6), while the rest focused on hypertension (n = 3). Findings highlight that cultural norms and practices, non-Western approaches to interpreting and managing illness, cultural connotations of health behaviours and structural challenges influencing self-care. Cultural food preferences made adherence to prescribed diets challenging. Family support facilitated self-care. Maintaining cultural identity was both a driver and constraint to engaging in self-care.
The complex interplay of cultural and structural factors influences the willingness of Africans who have immigrated to a developed country to follow recommended self-care practices. Considering these cultural norms and structural barriers can help to explain the self-care behaviours of African immigrant populations.
Clinicians and policymakers who account for structural factors and integrate cultural factors into care facilities, treatment protocols and policy can be influential in promoting self-care in African immigrant populations.
了解并识别影响非洲移民慢性病自我护理实践的文化因素,这些移民居住在非洲以外的国家。
在患有非传染性疾病(NCDs)的非洲移民中,文化因素对自我护理的影响相对较少被研究。
系统的混合研究综述。
PubMed、Psych Info、Embase、护理学和联合健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)、人类学加和社会学摘要计算机数据库。未对出版日期设置限制。
使用基于结果的综合设计。使用混合方法评估工具评估研究。定量研究进行叙述性综合,而定性研究则使用主题综合进行综合。
我们确定了 251 篇文章,其中 9 篇符合我们的纳入标准。这些研究发表于 2006 年至 2019 年期间,包括 6 项定性研究和 3 项定量研究。研究在美国、澳大利亚、瑞典、荷兰和英国进行。大多数研究都考察了文化对糖尿病自我护理的影响(n=6),而其余的研究则集中在高血压(n=3)上。研究结果强调了文化规范和实践、非西方的疾病解释和管理方法、健康行为的文化内涵以及影响自我护理的结构挑战。文化饮食偏好使得遵守规定的饮食变得具有挑战性。家庭支持促进了自我护理。保持文化认同既是参与自我护理的驱动力,也是限制因素。
文化和结构因素的复杂相互作用影响了移民到发达国家的非洲人遵循推荐的自我护理实践的意愿。考虑到这些文化规范和结构障碍,可以帮助解释非洲移民群体的自我护理行为。
考虑到结构因素并将文化因素纳入护理设施、治疗方案和政策的临床医生和政策制定者,可以在促进非洲移民群体的自我护理方面发挥影响力。