| Literature DB >> 20953916 |
Karla Espinosa de Los Monteros1, Linda C Gallo.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fatalism has been identified as a dominant belief among Latinos and is believed to act as a barrier to cancer prevention. However, controversy exists over the utility of the construct in explaining health disparities experienced by disadvantaged populations above the influence of structural barriers such as low socioeconomic status (SES) and limited access to health care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 20953916 PMCID: PMC3212691 DOI: 10.1007/s12529-010-9119-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Med ISSN: 1070-5503
Source of population, design, measurement, and results of reviewed studies
| Publication | Population | Design | Fatalism assessment | Cancer screening assessment | Study findings | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harmon et al. (1996) [ | Community sample of 566 Latinas randomly selected from 11 church rosters in the Phoenix, AZ metropolitan area. Mean age = 43.2 | Cross-sectional design. Data collected via telephone survey in language of choice (i.e., English or Spanish) | Study-specific 5-point Likert scale that assessed fear and fatalism towards cancer | Whether respondents had ever had a Pap smear (yes/no) and time since their last Pap smear | After controlling for age, education, family cancer history, insurance status, and acculturation, fear/fatalism was significantly associated with screening behavior ( | + |
| Representative items include: (1) I am so convinced that everything can cause cancer that I feel I have no control over my chances of avoiding it; (2) I am so afraid of being told that I have cancer that I avoid going to the doctor | ||||||
| Fear/fatalism towards cancer was associated with reporting a family history of cancer, low acculturation, and less education | ||||||
| Chavez et al. (1997) [ | Community sample of 1,225 women (803 Latinas) from Orange County, CA. Mean age of sample = 38.5 | Cross-sectional design. Data collected via structured telephone interviews in language of choice | Study-specific 4-item scale based on results from pilot data and ethnographic interviews previously conducted by authors. Response format: agree/disagree | Self-report of whether individual had undergone a Pap smear test within 3 years of interview | After controlling for insurance coverage and SES, Latinas who endorsed any fatalistic beliefs were significantly less likely to report Pap smear use within the last 3 years | + |
| Latinas with medical insurance and with more than 12 years of education were less likely to believe that there was little they could do to prevent cervical cancer | ||||||
| (1) Fate is a risk factor for cervical cancer; (2) I’d rather not know if I had cervical cancer; (3) There is not much I can do to prevent cervical cancer; (4) If found early, cervical cancer can be cured | ||||||
| Napoles (1999) [ | Community sample of 977 Latinas (ages 40–75 years) randomly selected from San Francisco, San Jose, Fresno, and Modesto, California | Cross-sectional design. Data collected via structured telephone interviews in language of choice | 3 dichotomous items derived from a 9-item measure developed by Perez-Estable et al. [ | Self-report of undergoing a mammogram within the past 2 years and a Pap smear within the last 3 years | No significant relationship between fatalism and mammography or Pap smear screening | − |
| Items included were the following: (1) Little one can do to detect cancer; (2) Cancer is like a death sentence; (3) Little one can do to prevent cancer | Fatalism was negatively associated with access to care, income, number of years in the USA, and US born status | |||||
| Ramirez et al. (2000) [ | Community sample of 2,239 Latinas age 40 and older randomly selected from San Francisco, Miami, Brownsville, Laredo, San Antonio, San Diego, and Brooklyn | Cross-sectional design. Data collected via telephone interviews in language of choice | Study-specific 2-item scale assessing women’s attitudes towards cancer. Response format: agree, disagree, neither | Self-report of undergoing mammogram in last 3 years and Pap smear in last 2 years | No Relationship between fatalism and mammography or Pap smear screening | − |
| (1) Cancer can be cured; (2) There is little that I can do to prevent cancer | Fatalism was related to country of origin with Mexican-Americans being the most fatalistic followed by Puerto Ricans | |||||
| No consistent association found between fatalism and SES | ||||||
| Randolph et al. (2002) [ | Area probability sample of 452 Mexican-American women ages 50–74 years from three southeast Texas counties | Cross-sectional design. Data collected via face-to face interviews in language of choice | 8-item Fatalism scale developed by Cuellar et al. [ | Self-reported Pap screen use within the past 3 years | No relationship between fatalism and Pap smear screening | − |
| Representative items include: (1) It is more important to enjoy life now than to plan for the future; (2) It does not do any good to try to change the future because the future is in the hands of God | ||||||
| Otero-Sabogal et al. (2003) [ | Community sample of 977 Latinas randomly selected from San Francisco, San Jose, Modesto, and Fresno, CA. Age range = 40–74 years | Cross-sectional design. Data collected via telephone interviews in language of choice | Study-specific 9-item cancer related fatalism scale based on focus group interviews conducted by investigators of this study and one item used in previous studies | Self-report of regular use of mammography or Pap smear screening during the past 5 years. Questions derived from NCI Breast Cancer Screening Consortium Studies | After controlling for sociodemographic variables, acculturation, access to care, and attitude about physicians, regular self-reported use of mammography (OR = 0.6) and Pap smear (OR = 0.6) screening was less likely in individuals who endorsed more fatalistic beliefs | + |
| (1) Little one can do to detect cancer; (2) Cancer is God’s punishment; (3) Almost everything causes cancer; (4) The word cancer scares you; (5) Cancer is like a death sentence; (6) Illness is a matter of chance; (7) Little one can do to prevent cancer; (8) Do not want to know about incurable cancer; (9) Rather not know about incurable cancer | Fatalism was negatively associated with US born status, education, acculturation, income, and access to health care | |||||
| Behbakht et al. (2004) [ | 148 women (39 Latinas) with newly diagnosed invasive cervical cancer presenting to the gynecological oncology divisions of 3 hospitals. Mean age = 49 | Retrospective cohort study design. Data collected via self-administered questionnaires in language of choice | Questions adapted from Chavez et al., [ | Self-report of whether or not they had undergone a Pap smear screen prior to their diagnosis | After controlling for insurance coverage, time living in the USA, and education, women who reported never undergoing a Pap smear screen prior to diagnosis were more likely to think that cancer was a result of bad luck (OR = 2.60) and state that they did not wish to be informed that they had cancer (OR = 3.00) | + |
| (1) Do you think cancer is a deadly disease; (2) Is cancer just bad luck; (3) Nothing can be done to avoid cancer; (4) Anything can cause cancer; (5) Cancer treatment is worse than the disease; (6) I would not want to know if I had cancer | ||||||
| Education level and ethnicity were not associated with fatalistic beliefs. | ||||||
| Magai et al. (2004) [ | Community-based sample of 1,364 Women (764 Latinas) randomly selected from US Census files. Mean age = 59.3 | Cross-sectional design. Data collected via face-to-face interviews. Language of interviews not specified | Powe Fatalism Inventory [ | Frequency of mammogram over the past 10 years | No relationship between fatalism and mammogram utilization | − |
| Gorin (2005) [ | Convenience sample of 950 Latinas residing New York communities who were participating in a national breast and cervical cancer screening program. Mean age = 56.80 | Cross-sectional prospective design. Data collected via self-administered questionnaires in language of choice | 3 items derived from Powe Fatalism Inventory (1995). Response format: 4-point Likert-like scale | Return of fecal occult blood test within 90 days | After controlling for age, education level, marital status, previous FOBT compliance, and medical risk factors, women who returned the FOBT expressed significantly fewer fatalistic attitudes and beliefs than those who did not comply, (OR = 1.57) | + |
| Teran et al. (2007) [ | 72 low-income Latinas randomly selected from a convenience sample of 1,964 women over the age of 40 who had contacted the Los Angeles County Breast Cancer Early Detection Program | Cross-sectional design. Data collected via telephone interviews in language of choice | Four items from the Fatalism scale developed by Cuellar et al. [ | Frequency of mammogram over the past 2 years | After controlling for age, education, and acculturation, women who endorsed more fatalistic beliefs were significantly less likely to report having had a mammogram within the past year (OR = 0.51) or 2 years (OR = 0.50) | + |
| Items included were: (1) People die when it’s their time; (2) Live for the present; (3) It is not wise to plan too far ahead; and (4) One cannot change the future because it is in the hands of God | ||||||
| Lopez-McKee et al. (2008) [ | 68 low-income Mexican-American women recruited from El Paso Cancer and Chronic Disease Consortium (EPCCDC) in El Paso Texas. All women included in study qualified for free mammograms through the EPCCDC and had undergone at least one mammogram in the 5 years prior to recruitment. Mean age = 57.6 | Cross-sectional design. Data collected via telephone interviews in language of choice | Powe Fatalism Inventory (1995) | After controlling for education, history of cancer, and years in the USA, infrequent screeners (obtained only one mammogram in previous 5 years) endorsed significantly more fatalistic beliefs than frequent screeners (obtained at least 4 mammograms in the previous 5 years). Mean scores on the PFI were 8.03 and 5.85 for infrequent and frequent screeners, respectively, | + | |
| See above for detailed information about instrument |