Exploring Preventive Health Care Utilization Among Black/African American Men.

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Harrell Jordan, Rohan Jeremiah, Karriem Watson, Colleen Corte, Alana Steffen, Alicia K Matthews
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Abstract

Black/African American (BAA) men have the lowest life expectancy among other major demographic groups in the United States, with BAA male mortality rates 40% higher than their White male counterparts. Despite known benefits of preventive health care utilization, BAA men are 43% more likely to use the emergency department for usual care. Many intersecting factors like medical mistrust and religion have been identified as common barriers BAA men face in health care utilization with few studies exploring factors that impact their current preventive health care utilization. In addition, BAA men's perceptions of health and ability to identify or seek help have always been disproportionately lower than other racial groups despite higher rates of preventable diseases. Using the tenets of the Andersen Healthcare Utilization Model, this cross-sectional study of 176 BAA men explores BAA men's current preventive health care practices while examining the intersection of predisposing, enabling, and need factors on BAA men's preventive health care utilization. While it is well known that higher income levels and higher education positively influence health care utilization, the intersection of religious affiliation and higher levels of medical mistrust was associated with BAA men's decreased engagement with health care as religion posed as a buffer to health care utilization. This study demonstrated that BAA men's perception of health differed by sexual orientation, educational status, and income. However, across all groups the participants' perspective of their health was not in alignment with their current health outcomes. Future studies should evaluate the impact of masculine norms as potential enabling factors on BAA men's preventive health care utilization.

探索美国黑人/非洲裔男性的预防保健使用情况。
在美国其他主要人口群体中,黑人/非洲裔美国人(BAA)男性的预期寿命最低,BAA 男性的死亡率比白人男性高 40%。尽管人们都知道利用预防性医疗保健的好处,但非洲裔美国人男性使用急诊科进行常规治疗的可能性要高出 43%。许多交叉因素,如对医疗的不信任和宗教信仰,都被认为是 BAA 族男性在使用医疗保健服务时面临的共同障碍,但很少有研究探讨影响他们目前使用预防性医疗保健服务的因素。此外,尽管可预防疾病的发病率较高,但黑人和亚裔男性对健康的认知以及识别或寻求帮助的能力一直低于其他种族群体。这项针对 176 名黑人和亚裔男子的横断面研究利用安德森医疗保健利用模式的原则,探讨了黑人和亚裔男子目前的预防性医疗保健做法,同时研究了黑人和亚裔男子预防性医疗保健利用中的倾向性因素、有利因素和需求因素之间的相互关系。众所周知,较高的收入水平和较高的教育水平会对医疗保健的利用产生积极影响,而宗教信仰和较高的医疗不信任水平则与 BAA 男性对医疗保健的参与减少有关,因为宗教对医疗保健的利用起到了缓冲作用。本研究表明,不同性取向、教育程度和收入的 BAA 男性对健康的看法各不相同。然而,在所有群体中,参与者对自身健康的看法与他们当前的健康结果并不一致。未来的研究应评估男性规范作为潜在有利因素对 BAA 男性预防性保健利用率的影响。
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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来源期刊
American Journal of Men's Health
American Journal of Men's Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
4.30%
发文量
107
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: American Journal of Men"s Health will be a core resource for cutting-edge information regarding men"s health and illness. The Journal will publish papers from all health, behavioral and social disciplines, including but not limited to medicine, nursing, allied health, public health, health psychology/behavioral medicine, and medical sociology and anthropology.
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