| Literature DB >> 29056849 |
Silvia J Santos1, Maria T Hurtado-Ortiz1, Laurenne Lewis2, Julia Ramirez-Garcia3.
Abstract
This study examined the validity of the Implicit Model of Illness Questionnaire (IMIQ - Schiaffino & Cea, 1995) when used with Latino college students (n = 156; 34% male, 66% female) who are at-risk for developing diabetes due to family history of this disease. An exploratory principal-axis factor analysis yielded four significant factors - curability, personal responsibility, symptom variability/seriousness, and personal attributions - which accounted for 35% of variance and reflected a psychosocial-biomedical common sense perspective of diabetes. Factor-based analyses revealed differences in diabetes illness beliefs based on students' age, generational status, acculturation orientation, and disease experience of the afflicted relative.Entities:
Keywords: Common sense illness beliefs; Latinos college students; diabetes; health beliefs
Year: 2015 PMID: 29056849 PMCID: PMC5648347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Health Stud ISSN: 1090-0500