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Culture, acculturation and smoking use in Hmong, Khmer, Laotians, and Vietnamese communities in Minnesota

机译:明尼苏达州的苗族,高棉,老挝人和越南社区的文化,文化和吸烟习惯

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Background Southeast Asian communities in the United States have suffered from high rates of tobacco use and high rates of chronic diseases associated with firsthand and secondhand smoking. Research is needed on how best to reduce and prevent tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke in these communities. The objective of this study was to examine how tobacco use patterns in Minnesota’s Southeast Asian communities have been shaped by culture, immigration, and adjustment to life in America in order to inform future tobacco control strategies. Methods The study consisted of semi-structured interviews with 60 formal and informal leaders from Minnesota’s Hmong, Khmer (Cambodian), Lao, and Vietnamese communities and incorporated principles of community-based participatory research. Results Among Khmer, Lao and Vietnamese, tobacco in the homeland was a valued part of material culture and was used to signify social status, convey respect, and support social rituals among adult men (the only group for whom smoking was acceptable). Among the Hmong, regular consumption of tobacco was unacceptable and rarely seen until the civil war in Laos when a number of Hmong soldiers became smokers. In Minnesota, social norms have begun to shift, with smoking becoming less acceptable. Although older male smokers felt social pressure to quit, smoking functioned to reduce the stress of social isolation, economic hardship, prior trauma, and the loss of power and status. Youth and younger women no longer felt as constrained by culturally-rooted social prohibitions to smoke. Conclusions Leaders from Minnesota’s Southeast Asian communities perceived key changes in tobacco-related attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors which were embedded in the context of shifting power, status, and gender roles within their communities. This has practical implications for developing policy and interventions. Older Southeast Asians are likely to benefit from culturally-tailored programs (e.g., that value politeness and the importance of acting in ways that benefit the family, community, and clan) and programs that work with existing social structures, as well as initiatives that address smokers’ psychological distress and social isolation. Leaders remained uncertain about how to address smoking uptake among youth, pointing to a need for additional research.
机译:背景技术在美国的东南亚社区遭受了高烟草使用率以及与第一手和第二手吸烟有关的慢性疾病的高比率。需要研究如何在这些社区中最佳地减少和预防烟草使用以及二手烟暴露。这项研究的目的是研究明尼苏达州东南亚社区的烟草使用方式是如何通过文化,移民和对美国生活的调整而形成的,以便为未来的烟草控制策略提供信息。方法该研究包括对来自明尼苏达州的苗族,高棉(柬埔寨),老挝和越南社区的60名正式和非正式领导人进行半结构式访谈,并纳入了基于社区的参与性研究原则。结果在高棉,老挝和越南语中,家乡的烟草是物质文化的重要组成部分,被用来表示成年男子(唯一可以接受吸烟的人群)的社会地位,表达尊重和支持社会礼仪。在苗族当中,经常消费烟草是不可接受的,直到老挝内战爆发时,苗族的一些士兵才开始吸烟,这种现象很少见。在明尼苏达州,社会规范已开始发生变化,吸烟变得越来越难以接受。尽管年龄较大的男性吸烟者感到戒烟的社会压力,但吸烟的作用是减轻社会隔离,经济困难,先前的创伤以及丧失权力和地位的压力。青年和年轻妇女不再受制于具有文化根基的社会禁止吸烟的束缚。结论来自明尼苏达州东南亚社区的领导人意识到与烟草相关的态度,信念和行为的重大变化,这些变化嵌入了社区内部权力,地位和性别角色的转变。这对制定政策和干预措施具有实际意义。东南亚的老年人可能会受益于文化量身定制的计划(例如,重视礼貌和以有益于家庭,社区和氏族的方式行事的重要性)和与现有社会结构一起工作的计划,以及旨在解决这些问题的举措吸烟者的心理困扰和社会隔离。领导人仍不确定如何解决青年人的吸烟问题,并指出需要进一步研究。

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