Suarez L, Pulley L
Associateship for Disease Control and Prevention, Texas Department of Health, Austin 78756, USA.
J Natl Cancer Inst Monogr. 1995(18):41-7.
Hispanic women in the United States are less likely to participate in breast and cervical cancer screening than women of other racial and ethnic groups. To plan appropriate interventions requires an understanding of the barriers to participation, including those of acculturation and assimilation. Few studies have examined the effects of acculturation and assimilation on the cancer-screening behavior of Mexican-American women.
Because of the extensive use of the Cuellar acculturation scale and the more recent use of the Hazuda scale, we explore the utility of these two measures to predict Pap smear and mammography screening. Using a population-based sample of Mexican-American women aged 40 years and older, we compare the two scales with each other and describe their relationship to sociodemographic factors and to participation in cancer screening.
The data are from baseline surveys in El Paso and Houston, Tex., conducted before the implementation of community interventions to improve Pap smear and mammography screening in low-income Mexican-American women. Study subjects were 923 randomly selected Mexican-American women aged 40 years and older living in 16 El Paso census tracts and seven Houston census tracts. Personal interviews solicited information on age, martial and employment status, household annual income and size, education, health insurance coverage, Pap smear and mammogram history, and a series of acculturation dimensions. Acculturation was measured using the abbreviated version of the Cuellar scale developed for the Hispanic Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1982-1984, and the Hazuda scale developed for the San Antonio Heart Study. The eight-item Cuellar acculturation scale assessed the extent to which Spanish and English were spoken, preferred, read, and written; the ethnic identification of the respondent and her parents; and generational status in the United States. The Hazuda scale assessed the following dimensions of acculturation: adult proficiency in English, adult pattern of English versus Spanish language usage, value placed on preserving Mexican cultural origin, attitude toward traditional family structure and sex-role organization, and adult interaction with members of mainstream society.
The Cuellar scale was highly correlated with Hazuda's two language dimension. The Hazuda scale dimensions, Mexican cultural values and traditional family attitudes, correlated the least with Cuellar's scale. All the acculturation dimensions, Cuellar's and Hazuda's, were strongly associated with education and health insurance coverage. With the use of multiple logistic regression to adjust for education, health insurance, and other variables, English proficiency was a predictor of both a recent Pap smear and a recent mammogram. No other language-based acculturation dimension was associated with a recent screening with adjustment for education, health insurance, and other variables. However, in controlling for these factors, we found that a woman's attitude toward traditional family structure was related inversely to mammogram screening. That is, women who held the strongest traditional Mexican family attitudes were more likely to participate in mammography screening.
This study shows the importance of separating the effects of acculturation on cancer screening from those due to social and economic conditions. Results suggest that the Hazuda scale provides a more multidimensional approach than the Cuellar scale and is a superior measure of the acculturation process. Traditional Mexican family attitudes positively influence mammogram-screening behavior, and this finding has implications for cancer control interventions in this population.
在美国,西班牙裔女性比其他种族和族裔的女性参与乳腺癌和宫颈癌筛查的可能性更低。要制定适当的干预措施,需要了解参与筛查的障碍,包括文化适应和同化方面的障碍。很少有研究考察文化适应和同化对墨西哥裔美国女性癌症筛查行为的影响。
由于广泛使用了库埃拉尔文化适应量表以及最近开始使用哈苏达量表,我们探讨这两种测量方法预测巴氏涂片检查和乳房X线摄影筛查的效用。我们以40岁及以上的墨西哥裔美国女性为基于人群的样本,将这两种量表相互比较,并描述它们与社会人口学因素以及癌症筛查参与情况的关系。
数据来自得克萨斯州埃尔帕索和休斯敦的基线调查,这些调查在针对低收入墨西哥裔美国女性开展改善巴氏涂片检查和乳房X线摄影筛查的社区干预措施之前进行。研究对象是923名随机选取的40岁及以上的墨西哥裔美国女性,她们居住在埃尔帕索的16个人口普查区和休斯敦的7个人口普查区。个人访谈收集了有关年龄、婚姻和就业状况、家庭年收入和规模、教育程度、医疗保险覆盖情况、巴氏涂片检查和乳房X线摄影检查历史以及一系列文化适应维度的信息。文化适应情况使用为1982 - 1984年西班牙裔健康和营养检查调查开发的库埃拉尔量表的简化版以及为圣安东尼奥心脏研究开发的哈苏达量表进行测量。包含八个条目的库埃拉尔文化适应量表评估了西班牙语和英语的使用、偏好、阅读和书写程度;受访者及其父母的种族认同;以及在美国的代际状况。哈苏达量表评估了以下文化适应维度:成人英语水平、成人英语与西班牙语的使用模式、对保留墨西哥文化根源的重视程度、对传统家庭结构和性别角色组织的态度以及成人与主流社会成员的互动。
库埃拉尔量表与哈苏达的两个语言维度高度相关。哈苏达量表的维度,即墨西哥文化价值观和传统家庭态度,与库埃拉尔量表的相关性最小。库埃拉尔量表和哈苏达量表的所有文化适应维度都与教育程度和医疗保险覆盖情况密切相关。使用多元逻辑回归来调整教育程度、医疗保险和其他变量后,英语水平是近期巴氏涂片检查和近期乳房X线摄影检查的一个预测因素。在调整教育程度、医疗保险和其他变量后,没有其他基于语言的文化适应维度与近期筛查相关。然而,在控制这些因素后,我们发现女性对传统家庭结构的态度与乳房X线摄影筛查呈负相关。也就是说,持有最强烈传统墨西哥家庭态度的女性更有可能参与乳房X线摄影筛查。
本研究表明将文化适应对癌症筛查的影响与社会和经济状况导致的影响区分开来的重要性。结果表明,哈苏达量表比库埃拉尔量表提供了一种更具多维性的方法,并且是文化适应过程的一种更优测量方法。传统墨西哥家庭态度对乳房X线摄影筛查行为有积极影响,这一发现对该人群的癌症控制干预措施具有启示意义。