Risky shifts or shifting risk: African and African-Caribbean women's narratives on delay in seeking help for breast cancer

J. Littlewood, E. Elias
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Research in USA and the UK has revealed that whilst the incidence of breast cancer is lower in women from black and ethnic minority groups, African and African-American women delay seeking help, have a worse prognosis, and a higher mortality rate. A variety of reasons has been suggested for this: from system delay, to delay by the women arising from educational and socio-economic disadvantage or religious beliefs. Building on this in the UK, from a study conducted in a South London Screening Clinic, a sub-sample of African and African-Caribbean women were interviewed to obtain their narratives of action in delay in seeking help for late-stage breast cancer. The findings suggest that the women were aware of the services offered, were expecting a diagnosis of cancer, but offered a model of fearing extrusion from their community rather than fear of death from the disease, leading to delay in seeking help. The reasons for this are explored and a risk trajectory in biomedicine compared with the African and African-Caribbean women's world is described.
风险转变或转移风险:非洲和非洲-加勒比妇女关于延迟寻求乳腺癌帮助的叙述
美国和英国的研究表明,虽然黑人和少数民族妇女的乳腺癌发病率较低,但非洲裔和非裔美国妇女迟迟不寻求帮助,预后较差,死亡率较高。对此提出了各种各样的原因:从制度延迟,到妇女因教育和社会经济劣势或宗教信仰而造成的延迟。在此基础上,在英国南伦敦筛查诊所进行的一项研究中,对非洲和非洲-加勒比妇女的子样本进行了采访,以获得她们延迟寻求晚期乳腺癌帮助的行动叙述。研究结果表明,这些妇女知道所提供的服务,期待得到癌症诊断,但提供了一种害怕被社区排挤而不是害怕死于疾病的模式,导致寻求帮助的时间被推迟。探讨了造成这种情况的原因,并描述了生物医学领域与非洲和非洲-加勒比妇女世界相比的风险轨迹。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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