College of Health, Medicine & Wellbeing, The University of Newcastle, Taree, New South Wales, 2430, Australia.
College of Nursing & Health Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia.
J Women Aging. 2023 Jan-Feb;35(1):4-21. doi: 10.1080/08952841.2021.1996195. Epub 2021 Nov 2.
Poverty, poor living conditions, religious values and norms, lack of education, and gender discrimination influence the beliefs and behaviors of rural older women in many low-income countries. This paper aims to report the socio-ecological determinants of health-seeking beliefs and behaviors of rural older women in North-eastern Bangladesh and how these behaviors impact their recognition within the setting. It involved semi-structured interviews with 25 older women and 11 healthcare professionals. The findings revealed various determinants at the personal level (awareness of illness, mistrust toward medical treatment, self-treatment, and religious values and norms), the interpersonal level (isolation in family and communication with clinicians), community level (community perception of aging, neighboring and community organizations), and in the sphere of human rights (care affordability, social safety-net coverage and national policy). Four core determinants (poverty, education, gender and religiosity) were intertwined in shaping beliefs and behaviors.
贫困、恶劣的生活条件、宗教价值观和规范、缺乏教育以及性别歧视等因素影响着许多低收入国家农村老年妇女的信仰和行为。本文旨在报告孟加拉国东北部农村老年妇女的健康寻求信念和行为的社会生态决定因素,以及这些行为如何影响她们在特定环境中的认知。研究采用半结构式访谈的方式,对 25 名老年妇女和 11 名医疗保健专业人员进行了访谈。研究结果揭示了个人层面(对疾病的认识、对医疗的不信任、自我治疗和宗教价值观和规范)、人际层面(家庭隔离和与临床医生的沟通)、社区层面(社区对老龄化的看法、邻里和社区组织)以及人权领域(护理负担能力、社会安全网覆盖范围和国家政策)等方面的各种决定因素。四个核心决定因素(贫困、教育、性别和宗教信仰)交织在一起,影响了信念和行为的形成。