Literature DB >> 30892642

Americans' Health Mindsets: Content, Cultural Patterning, and Associations With Physical and Mental Health.

Alana L Conner1, Danielle Z Boles1, Hazel Rose Markus1, Jennifer L Eberhardt1, Alia J Crum1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Health mindsets are mental frameworks that help people recognize, organize, interpret, and respond to health-relevant information. Although mindsets shape health behaviors and outcomes, no study has examined the health mindsets of ethnically and socioeconomically diverse Americans.
PURPOSE: We explored the content, cultural patterning, and health correlates of diverse Americans' health mindsets.
METHODS: Two studies surveyed approximately equal numbers of African American, Asian American, European American, and Latinx American men and women of lower and higher socioeconomic status (SES). Study 1 (N = 334) used open-ended questions to elicit participants' mindsets about the definitions, causes, and benefits of health. Study 2 (N = 320) used Study 1's results to develop a closed-ended instrument.
RESULTS: In Study 1, open-ended questioning revealed six overarching mindset themes: behavioral, medical, physical, psychological, social, and spiritual. The most prevalent mindsets were psychological definitions, behavioral causes, and psychological benefits. Participants mentioned more cause themes than definition or benefit themes, and mindset theme mentions correlated with worse health. Older participants mentioned more themes than younger, women mentioned more definition themes than men, and low-SES participants mentioned more cause themes than high-SES participants. In Study 2, closed-ended scales uncovered more complex and positive health mindsets. Psychological and spiritual benefit mindsets correlated with good mental health. African Americans and women endorsed the widest array of mindsets, and the spiritual benefit mindset partially explained the superior mental health of African Americans.
CONCLUSIONS: Many Americans hold simplistic, illness-focused health mindsets. Cultivating more complex, benefit-focused, and culturally appropriate health mindsets could support health.
© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Health disparities; Lay theories; Mental health; Mindset; Race paradox

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30892642     DOI: 10.1093/abm/kay041

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Behav Med        ISSN: 0883-6612


  2 in total

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Journal:  J Altern Complement Med       Date:  2020-06-17       Impact factor: 2.579

Review 2.  Concepts of health in different contexts: a scoping review.

Authors:  V P van Druten; E A Bartels; D van de Mheen; E de Vries; A P M Kerckhoffs; L M W Nahar-van Venrooij
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  2 in total

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