Mardiros M
J Adv Nurs. 1984 Sep;9(5):469-78. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2648.1984.tb00399.x.
Little information exists in the literature to assist the nurse in understanding people of ethnic minority group status who become hospitalized in an acute-care setting. Research on these populations has primarily centred on out-patient service utilization and on folk health practices, yet the process of becoming hospitalized seems far more disruptive and traumatic to the individual and the family than receiving health care at a clinic. Observations made on a large medical-surgical in-patient unit in the south-western United States indicated the specific concerns Mexican American patients experienced during their hospitalization. Seventy patients of Mexican descent were followed through their hospital stay. Seven sociocultural constructs influenced the hospital experience: social network, language proficiency, modesty, socio-economic status, role expectations, folk beliefs and practices, and the medical diagnosis. Economic and educational status were seen as the most significant factors preventing patients from this ethnic minority group from constructing their hospital experience in accordance with staff expectations.
文献中几乎没有信息可帮助护士了解在急症护理环境中住院的少数族裔群体患者。对这些人群的研究主要集中在门诊服务利用和民间健康实践上,然而,住院过程对个人和家庭来说似乎比在诊所接受医疗保健更具破坏性和创伤性。在美国西南部一个大型内科-外科住院病房进行的观察表明,墨西哥裔美国患者在住院期间遇到了一些具体问题。70名墨西哥裔患者在住院期间接受了跟踪。七种社会文化因素影响了住院体验:社会网络、语言能力、谦逊、社会经济地位、角色期望、民间信仰和习俗以及医疗诊断。经济和教育状况被视为阻碍这个少数族裔患者按照医护人员期望构建住院体验的最重要因素。