Literature DB >> 26087716

An Exploratory Study of Acculturation and Reproductive Health Among Haitian and Haitian-American Women in Little Haiti, South Florida.

E Cyrus1,2, E L Gollub3, M Jean-Gilles4,5, S Neptune4, V Pelletier2, J Dévieux4,5.   

Abstract

There is unmet contraceptive need among Haitian immigrants and Haitian-American women (Haitian women). The study explored associations of three measures of acculturation with contraceptive/reproductive health history among Haitian women residing in the Little Haiti community of Miami. This was a cross-sectional, exploratory study among 57 Haitian women. We conducted descriptive univariate analyses, then bivariate analyses to investigate the association of acculturation with reproductive health risk behavior including contraceptive use, tampon use, and parity, as well as interest in a female-initiated barrier contraceptive method. The most commonly ever-used contraceptive methods were male condoms (78.9 %) and oral contraceptives (OC 19.3 %). Women who primarily spoke Créole at home were less likely than those who did not to use OC (11.9 vs. 42.9 %, p = .01). Among women who resided in the U.S. ≥10 years, tampon use was 51.9 % compared to 16.7 % among those who were in the U.S. for less time (p = .005). Among U.S. born women, 60 % were tampon users compared to 22.7 % among those born in Haiti (p = .05). Women not speaking primarily Créole at home (p = .06) and those born in U.S. (p = .008) had fewer children. Contraceptive use was low among Haitian women but influenced by acculturation, where greater acculturation was associated with protective reproductive health behavior. Despite traditional norms discouraging contraceptive use, and little experience with female barriers, Haitian women indicated an interest in learning about and using a female-initiated barrier contraceptive. Increasing contraceptive uptake of potential multipurpose technologies is a potential point of intervention for decreasing HIV/STI transmission in this at-risk population.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Acculturation; Contraception; Female barrier methods; Femcap™; Haitian; Women

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26087716     DOI: 10.1007/s10903-015-0235-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health        ISSN: 1557-1912


  21 in total

1.  Electrospun solid dispersions of Maraviroc for rapid intravaginal preexposure prophylaxis of HIV.

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3.  Psychometric Evaluation of the Brief Acculturation Scale for Hispanics.

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4.  HIV/AIDS surveillance data for New York City West Indian-born Blacks: comparisons with other immigrant and US-born groups.

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Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2012-09-20       Impact factor: 9.308

5.  Characteristics related to effective contraceptive use among a sample of nonurban Latinos.

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8.  Assessing the acceptability of self-sampling for HPV among Haitian immigrant women: CBPR in action.

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9.  Performance and safety of the second-generation female condom (FC2) versus the Woman's, the VA worn-of-women, and the Cupid female condoms: a randomised controlled non-inferiority crossover trial.

Authors:  Mags E Beksinska; Gilda Piaggio; Jennifer A Smit; Junqing Wu; Yufeng Zhang; Jacqueline Pienaar; Ross Greener; Ying Zhou; Carol Joanis
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10.  Sociocultural and religious influences on the normative contraceptive practices of Latino women in the United States.

Authors:  Laura F Romo; Abbey B Berenson; Amanda Segars
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2004-03       Impact factor: 3.375

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