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Early Breast Cancer Detection in Multicultural Societies

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Older women as a special target group. Possible policies and solutions ... Targeting Older Minority Women (age 60 ... cultures, older women view themselves ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Breast Cancer Detection in Multicultural Societies


1
Early Breast Cancer Detection in Multicultural
Societies
  • Immigrant/minority women as HC users
  • Structural and cultural barriers to PrevHC
  • HBM gap between cognitions and practices
  • Fatalism, fear of cancer, mistrust of therapy
  • BC as a threat to the gender role/worth
  • Older women as a special target group
  • Possible policies and solutions

2
Minority Women Barriers to Preventive HC
  • Financial limited or lacking health insurance
  • Organizational distance, no car, office hours
  • Cultural language, attitudes towards health
    illness, providers gender
  • Psychosocial low health motivation
    over-burdened personal agenda caring for family
    members, not self
  • Emphasis on curative not preventive services

3
Examples from Israel Bi-annual Mammo Prevalence,
age 50-74
  • Mainstream Jewish women 50-60
  • Russian Jewish Immigrants 40
  • Ethiopian Jewish Immigrants 20
  • Israeli Palestinian (Arab) Women 20
  • No group data on BSE or clinical exams

4
Health Belief Model Cognitions, Attitudes, and
Practices
  • Ideas not leading to action Women are informed
    about BC risks, admit personal susceptibility,
    but Not seek early detection
  • Attitudes expressed in surveys do not reflect
    innermost feelings about cancer, esp. in minority
    groups (in-depth interviews do better)
  • Broader cognitions-practice gap among
    immigrant/minority women due to low health
    motivation higher barriers to mainstream HC

5
Underlying Reasons for Non-Action in BC Screening
  • Denial This cannot happen to me
  • Fatalism towards cancer as enigmatic and menacing
    disease (reflects external locus of control and
    low self-efficacy)
  • Doubts about benefits of early detection
  • (Dont trouble the trouble before the trouble
    troubles you)
  • Mistrust of possible cure, perceived futility
    of harsh cancer treatments, fear of becoming a
    burden on family members

6
BC and Womans Worth in Traditional Patriarchal
Societies
  • Any chronic disabling condition is perceived as
    endpoint of my life as a woman a sick
    homemaker is devalued and eventually discarded
  • Women give care to men and children, not receive
    care from them role reversal is hard to take
  • I dont want to bring this trouble on myself
  • Id rather not know and not tell others
    until the
  • very end

7
Targeting Older Minority Women (age 60)
  • Relational Self In non-western cultures, older
    women view themselves as secondary and
    subservient to the needs of children
    grandchildren, i.e. with especially low
    preventive motivation and high fatalism/low
    self-worth
  • Isolation from the mainstream, high cultural
    barriers to HC services, poor personal resources
  • Discomfort about visiting womens health clinics
    or gynecologists perceived as catering mainly for
    younger fertile and sexually active women
  • Media image of BC as younger womens problem

8
Some Approaches to Policy
  • Empower minority women, enhance their sense of
    self-worth and self-care
  • Educate men in ethnic communities so that they
    encourage women to get screened
  • Design specially tailored educational programs to
    dispel common myths and misperceptions of BC
    among minorities and marginal social groups
  • Cultural sensitivity/competence training for the
    mainstream service providers
  • Introduce more minority health professionals to
    target their co-ethnics
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