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Breast cancer delay in Latinas: the role of cultural beliefs and acculturation

机译:拉美裔的乳腺癌延误:文化信仰和文化适应的作用

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摘要

Cultural beliefs about breast cancer may act as a barrier to Latina women seeking preventive services or timely follow-up for breast symptoms regardless of access. This study examines the association between factors and breast cancer cultural beliefs and the extent to which cultural beliefs are associated with delays in breast cancer care. Participants who were Latina, ages 30–79, and had been diagnosed with a primary breast cancer were examined (n = 181). Interviews included a 15-item cultural beliefs scale spanning beliefs inconsistent with motivation to seek timely healthcare. Self-reported date of symptom discovery, date of first medical presentation, and date of first treatment were used to construct measures of prolonged patient, clinical, and total delay. Logistic regression with model-based standardization was used to estimate crude and confounder-adjusted prevalence differences for prolonged delay by number of cultural beliefs held. Women held a mean score of three cultural beliefs. The belief most commonly held was, “Faith in God can protect you from breast cancer” (48 %). Holding three or more cultural beliefs was associated with lower acculturation, lower socioeconomic status and less access to care (p < 0.01). After adjusting for age, education, income, acculturation, trust, and insurance, likelihood of prolonged total delay remained 21 percentage points higher in women who held a higher number cultural beliefs (p = 0.02). Cultural beliefs may predispose Latina women to prolong delays in seeking diagnosis and treatment for breast symptoms. Cultural beliefs represent a potential point of intervention to decrease delays among Latina breast cancer patients.
机译:有关乳腺癌的文化信仰可能会成为拉丁裔妇女寻求预防服务或及时随访乳腺症状的障碍,无论她们如何获得治疗。这项研究检查了因素与乳腺癌文化信仰之间的关联,以及文化信仰与乳腺癌护理延误相关的程度。检查了拉丁裔,年龄在30-79岁并被诊断出患有原发性乳腺癌的参与者(n = 181)。访谈包括15个项目的文化信念量表,其范围与寻求及时医疗保健的动机不一致。自我报告的症状发现日期,首次就诊的日期和首次治疗的日期用于构建延长患者,临床和总延迟的指标。使用基于模型的标准化进行Logistic回归来估计粗略和混杂因素调整的患病率差异,以根据所持文化信念的数量来延长时间。妇女平均拥有三种文化信仰。最普遍的信念是:“对上帝的信仰可以保护您免受乳腺癌”(48%)。持有三种或三种以上的文化信仰与较低的文化适应度,较低的社会经济地位和较少的就诊机会相关(p <0.01)。在对年龄,文化,收入,文化,信任和保险进行了调整之后,拥有较高文化信仰的女性中延长总延误的可能性仍然高21个百分点(p = 0.02)。文化信仰可能会使拉丁裔妇女延长对乳腺症状的诊断和治疗的延误。文化信仰是减少拉丁裔乳腺癌患者延误的潜在干预手段。

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