| Literature DB >> 24163710 |
Paul R Jones1, Dexter M Taylor, Jodi Dampeer-Moore, Katherine L Van Allen, Darlene R Saunders, Cecelia B Snowden, Mark B Johnson.
Abstract
To our knowledge, no published research has developed an individual difference measure of health-related stereotype threat (HRST). We adapted existing measures of academic stereotype threat to the health domain on a sample of black college students (N = 280). The resulting health-related stereotype threat scale-24 (HRST-24) was assessed for internal consistency, construct and incremental validity, and whether it explains variance in self-reported delays among four preventive health behaviors-blood pressure and cholesterol assays, physical exams, and routine checkups. After adjusting for several control variables, the HRST-24's (full scale α = 0.96) perceived black health inferiority (18 items; α = 0.96) and perceived physician racial bias (6 items; α = 0.85) sub-scales explained unique variance in delays among two of the four behaviors including a blood cholesterol check (p < .01) and routine checkup-albeit at marginal levels (p = .063) in the case of the latter. Overall, these data provide preliminary evidence of construct and incremental validity for the HRST-24 among blacks. Recommendations for administering the scale are provided and future directions for HRST research are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: African-Americans; Blacks; Health disparities; Health services; Health-related stereotype threat scale; Stereotype threat
Year: 2013 PMID: 24163710 PMCID: PMC3806300 DOI: 10.1007/s12552-013-9088-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Race Soc Probl