Literature DB >> 23448411

Effects of social injustice on breast health-seeking behaviors of low-income women.

Shelly-Ann Bowen1, Edith M Williams, Chayah M Stoneberg-Cooper, Saundra H Glover, Michelle S Williams, Michael D Byrd.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The study uses qualitative research to gain a better understanding of what occurs after low-income women receive an abnormal breast screening and the factors that influence their decisions and behavior. A heuristic model is presented for understanding this complexity.
DESIGN: Qualitative research methods used to elicited social and cultural themes related to breast cancer screening follow-up.
SETTING: Individual telephone interviews were conducted with 16 women with confirmed breast anomaly. PARTICIPANTS: Low-income women screened through a national breast cancer early detection program.
METHOD: Grounded theory using selective coding was employed to elicit factors that influenced the understanding and follow-up of an abnormal breast screening result. Interviews were digitally recorded, transcribed, and uploaded into NVivo 8, a qualitative management and analysis software package.
RESULTS: For women (16, or 72% of case management referrals) below 250% of the poverty level, the impact of social and economic inequities creates a psychosocial context underlined by structural and cultural barriers to treatment that forecasts the mechanism that generates differences in health outcomes. The absence of insurance due to underemployment and unemployment and inadequate public infrastructure intensified emotional stress impacting participants' health decisions.
CONCLUSION: The findings that emerged offer explanations of how consistent patterns of social injustice impact treatment decisions in a high-risk vulnerable population that have implications for health promotion research and systems-level program improvement and development.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23448411      PMCID: PMC3971010          DOI: 10.4278/ajhp.110505-QUAL-189

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Health Promot        ISSN: 0890-1171


  43 in total

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6.  Adherence of low-income women to cancer screening recommendations.

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7.  Health disparities and health equity: the issue is justice.

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8.  Socioeconomic factors and breast cancer in black and white Americans.

Authors:  Nahida H Gordon
Journal:  Cancer Metastasis Rev       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 9.264

9.  A disease-specific Medicaid expansion for women. The Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act of 2000.

Authors:  Paula M Lantz; Carol S Weisman; Zena Itani
Journal:  Womens Health Issues       Date:  2003 May-Jun

10.  Inequalities in health.

Authors:  M Marmot
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2001-07-12       Impact factor: 91.245

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  2 in total

1.  A Strategic Framework for Utilizing Late-Stage (T4) Translation Research to Address Health Inequities.

Authors:  Maria Lopez-Class; Emmanuel Peprah; Xinzhi Zhang; Peter G Kaufmann; Michael M Engelgau
Journal:  Ethn Dis       Date:  2016-07-21       Impact factor: 1.847

2.  Time from Screening Mammography to Biopsy and from Biopsy to Breast Cancer Treatment among Black and White, Women Medicare Beneficiaries Not Participating in a Health Maintenance Organization.

Authors:  Rebecca Selove; Barbara Kilbourne; Mary Kay Fadden; Maureen Sanderson; Maya Foster; Regina Offodile; Baqar Husaini; Charles Mouton; Robert S Levine
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  2 in total

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