| Literature DB >> 20556491 |
Lois M Takahashi1, Anna J Kim, Lola Sablan-Santos, Lourdes Flores Quitugua, Jay Aromin, Jonathan Lepule, Tony Maguadog, Rose Perez, Louise Young, Steve Young.
Abstract
We measured Hepatitis B virus (HBV) transmission knowledge and self-reported screening/testing behavior among Pacific Islanders (Guamanians/Chamorros, Samoans, and Tongans) in Southern California. We also examined access and trust by Pacific Islanders of varying health information sources. We administered and analyzed survey data (N = 297), using a convenience sample in Los Angeles, Orange, and San Diego Counties in spring 2009. We found that while Pacific Islander respondents reported that they receive health information from physicians, and largely trust this source, information from and trust in physicians were not statistically significant in explaining whether respondents sought HBV screening or vaccination.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 20556491 PMCID: PMC3020313 DOI: 10.1007/s10900-010-9285-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Health ISSN: 0094-5145
Sample characteristics compared to 2005–2007 PUMS
| Demographic or health variable | Respondent characteristics ( | Comparison to 2005–2007 PUMS ( |
|---|---|---|
| Ethnic background | 51% Samoan | 53% Samoan |
| 49% Chamorro | 47% Chamorro | |
| Gender | 55% female | 49% female |
| 44% male | 51% male | |
| Age | Average = 40 years | Average = 38 years |
| Range: 16–82 years | Range = 16–82 years | |
| Place of birth | 45% California | 46% California |
| 27% Guam | 18% Guam | |
| 14% American Samoa | 10% American Samoa | |
| 4% Samoa/Western Samoa | 8% Western Samoa | |
| Number of years in US (for immigrants only) | Mean = 29 years | Mean = 28 years |
| Range = 4–55 years | Range = 4–55 years | |
| English language capacity | 62% speak English fluently | 80% speak English fluently |
| 24% speak English very well | 8% speak English well | |
| Pacific Islander language capacity | 27% speak Pacific Islander language fluently | 9% speak Chamorro/Guamanian |
| 13% speak very well | 27% speak Samoan | |
| 11% speak not at all | 45% speak only English | |
| Marital status | 43% Married | 51% Married |
| 31% Single or never married | 37% Single or never married | |
| 10% Divorced or separated | 9% Divorced or separated | |
| Health insurance | 17% No insurance | N/A |
| Education | 9% Elementary school | 15% Elementary school |
| 8% Junior high school | 4% Junior high school | |
| 51% High school or GED | 28% High school or GED | |
| 11% Tech/vocational school | 20% Some college | |
| 19% College or university graduate | 10% Junior college/college graduate | |
| Employment status | 63% Full/part time employed | 89% Full/part time employed |
| 19% Unemployed | 11% unemployed | |
| Household size | Average: 5.6 | Average: 4.9 |
| Range: 1–40 persons | Range: 1–12 | |
| Household members younger than 18 | Average: 1.9 | Average: 0.85 |
| Range: 0–13 household members < 18 years | Range: 0–6 own children present | |
| Household composition | 95% Family | 99% Family or sub-family |
| Approximate total household income during last year | 5% Less than $10,000 | 2% Less than $10,000 |
| 7% $10,000–$19,999 | 5% $10,000–$19,999 | |
| 17% $20,000–$29,999 | 9% $20,000–$29,999 | |
| 12% $30,000–$39,999 | 6% $30,000–$39,999 | |
| 7% $40,000–$49,999 | 8% $40,00–$49,999 | |
| 28% $50,000 or more | 70% $50,000 or more | |
| 24% Not sure/Don’t know |
Knowledge of Hepatitis B virus transmission
| Knowledge variable | Response |
|---|---|
| Heard of Hepatitis B ( | 63% yes |
| 23% no | |
| 14% don’t know | |
| In your opinion, in which ethnic group is Hepatitis B most common? ( | 3% White |
| 8% Black | |
| 1% Hispanic/Latino | |
| 4% Asian Americans | |
| 4% Pacific Islanders | |
| 24% All equally common | |
| 56% Don’t know | |
| In your opinion, Hepatitis B can be transmitted by: ( | 63% unprotected sex |
| 63% using contaminated needles | |
| 61% contact blood or bodily fluids from an infected person | |
| 38% an infected mother to her baby at the time of delivery | |
| 30% heredity | |
| 30% eating unclean food | |
| 26% sharing food with an infected person | |
| 21% sharing utensils/chopsticks | |
| 19% kissing | |
| 6% other (le ilor, raw food, ti utungo, toilet seat) |
Hepatitis B risk and most influence in screening/vaccination
| Awareness variable | Response |
|---|---|
| What influenced or would influence you to get Hepatitis B screening and vaccination? ( | 64% Doctor told you to get screened |
| 35% Family member is a carrier | |
| 34% Free screening/vaccination or if covered by insurance | |
| 32% Fear of being infected by the virus | |
| 31% Encouraged by family members | |
| 28% Attended Hepatitis B educational workshop | |
| 22% Encouraged by spouse | |
| 21% Encouraged by friends | |
| 9% Other (Bakura, Teacher, Employer, Galuega, Travel) | |
| Do you think you could be infected with Hepatitis B? ( | 6% Yes |
| 52% No | |
| 41% Not sure/Don’t know | |
| Have you ever been diagnosed with Hepatitis B infection? ( | 1% Yes |
| 78% No | |
| 21% Not sure/Don’t know |
aTotal percentages may add up to more than 100% as respondents were asked to list all that apply; the only responses that were highly correlated (using Pearson correlation coefficient) were being encouraged by friends and family members
Health information sources and trust (ranked by sources used by respondents)
| Information source | Reported getting information from this source | Reported NOT getting information from this source |
|---|---|---|
| Physician/health care provider ( | 79% yes | 21% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 89% used source in past year | 51% trusted information from this source | |
| 97% trusted information from this source | ||
| Pharmacists ( | 53% yes | 47% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 90% used source in past year | 31% trusted information from this source | |
| 97% trusted information from this source | ||
| Family members ( | 48% yes | 52% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 89% used source in past year | 25% trusted information from this source | |
| 83% trusted information from this source | ||
| Community functions or health fairs ( | 46% yes | 54% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 84% used source in past year | 24% trusted information from this source | |
| 92% trusted information from this source | ||
| Church, spiritual or religious leaders ( | 31% yes | 69% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 83% used source in past year | 18% trusted information from this source | |
| 94% trusted information from this source | ||
| Friends ( | 29% yes | 71% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 87% used source in past year | 13% trusted information from this source | |
| 91% trusted information from this source | ||
| Employee assistance programs ( | 26% yes | 74% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 90% used source in past year | 18% trusted information from this source | |
| 97% trusted information from this source | ||
| Co-workers ( | 20% yes | 80% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 77% used source in past year | 14% trusted information from this source | |
| 84% trusted information from this source | ||
| Traditional healers ( | 17% yes | 83% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 69% used source in past year | 16% trusted information from this source | |
| 85% trusted information from this source | ||
| Telephone advice lines ( | 8% yes | 92% no |
| For respondents who answered “yes” | For respondents who answered “no” | |
| 71% used source in past year | 13% trusted information from this source | |
| 96% trusted information from this source |
Logistic regression results for Hepatitis B screening/testing (N = 63)
| Variable (bolded variables are statistically significant at least at | Odds ratio | SE |
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| 95% confidence interval |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics/medical coverage | |||||
| Has medicare coverage (1 = yes, 0 = no) | 0.32 | 0.29 | −1.27 | 0.20 | 0.06–1.86 |
| Highest grade of school completed (1 = elementary school, 6 = post-graduate school) | 1.59 | 0.53 | 1.39 | 0.16 | 0.83–3.07 |
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| Currently retired (1 = yes, 0 = no) | 7.42 | 10.19 | 1.46 | 0.15 | 0.50–109.47 |
| Information sources | |||||
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| Gets information about health and health care from the Internet (1 = yes, 0 = no) | 1.75 | 1.63 | 0.59 | 0.55 | 0.28–10.94 |
| Gets information about health and health care from Pacific Islander organizations (1 = yes, 0 = no) | 4.06 | 3.87 | 1.47 | 0.14 | 0.63–26.24 |
Logistic regression results for Hepatitis B vaccination (N = 78)
| Variable (bolded variables are statistically significant at least at | Odds ratio | SE |
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| 95% confidence interval |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics/medical coverage | |||||
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| − |
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| Highest grade of school completed (1 = elementary school, 6 = post-graduate school) | 1.04 | 0.30 | 0.13 | 0.90 | 0.59–1.81 |
| Currently employed part time (one part time position) (1 = yes, 0 = no) | 0.29 | 0.25 | −1.41 | 0.16 | 0.05–1.62 |
| Currently retired (1 = yes, 0 = no) | 4.04 | 5.46 | 1.03 | 0.30 | 0.29–57.03 |
| Hepatitis B knowledge | |||||
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| Information sources | |||||
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| Gets information about health and health care from social service provider or community health center (1 = yes, 0 = no) | 0.71 | 0.53 | −0.46 | 0.64 | 0.17–3.03 |