| Literature DB >> 19741240 |
Jean Lange1, Sharon Evans-Benard, Jennifer Cooper, Ellen Fahey, Marlain Kalapos, Donna Tice, Nancy Wang-D'Amato, Nancy Watsky.
Abstract
Women frequently fail to recognize that coronary heart disease (CHD), not breast cancer, is the primary cause of female mortality. CHD mortality among U.S. mainland Puerto Rican (PR) women is second only to African American women. It is unknown what PR women understand about their risk, what factors they believe contribute to CHD, or whether they know the atypical symptoms often experienced by women. Most CHD studies exclude Hispanic women. Those that do often aggregate their results, making subgroup variations invisible. This study explored awareness of CHD symptoms, risks, and help-seeking behaviors among 12 PR women. Focus group methodology revealed that participants were unaware of their risk and had misconceptions about CHD symptoms and contributing factors. Barriers to early recognition and treatment included lack of knowledge, gender role conflict (caregiver vs. care recipient), and fears of falsely alarming family members or the embarrassment of feeling "dismissed" by health care providers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19741240 DOI: 10.1177/1054773809346539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Nurs Res ISSN: 1054-7738 Impact factor: 2.075