Outreach for Young Adult African Americans with Risk Factors for Stroke.

Q2 Medicine
Health literacy research and practice Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-07 DOI:10.3928/24748307-20240220-01
Iris Feinberg, Dawn M Aycock, Elizabeth L Tighe, Delaney Detamore
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Research suggests that younger adult African American people (age 18-35 years) have more than double the risk of having a stroke than White people. Stroke risk education is lacking for this cohort; there is a dearth of materials that are targeted and focused for young adult African Americans. There is also little research on developing and testing age and culturally appropriate health literate materials that may help this population better understand personal risk factors for stroke.

Objective: The aim of this study was to understand factors to guide creating and disseminating plain language health messages about stroke risk awareness among young adult African Americans.

Methods: African American participants age 18 years and older completed an online survey (N = 413). Descriptive statistics, one-way analysis of variance, and two-step cluster analyses were used to evaluate stroke risk awareness, perceived risk of stroke, message creation factors, and online health information seeking behavior. Open-ended survey items described modifiable and non-modifiable reasons for perceived risk of stroke.

Key results: Participants reported differences on overall stroke risk factor awareness by perceived risk of stroke was significant (F[2, 409] = 4.91, p = .008) with the very low/low group (M = 1.66, p < .01), showing significantly lower overall stroke risk factor awareness compared to the moderate and high/very high groups. Both respondents who thought their stroke risk was very low/low and moderate/high/very high commented about family history (54.1% and 45.9%, respectively) as the reason and 88.2% of very low/low commented that they did not have risk factors for stroke because they were young. Cluster analysis indicated the Mostly Clear Preferences cluster was more likely to select mostly/very on positive, informational, and long-term messages and medical authority sources. The largest of three clusters reported medical sources as the highest rated source for both finding and trusting health information (47.2%, n = 195).

Conclusion: Young adult African Americans have a scarce understanding of modifiable stroke risk factors; health education materials should focus on positive information messaging that shows a long-term result and is presented by a medical authority. We did not observe any age or sex differences among the data, which suggests different message modalities may not be needed. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2024;8(1):e38-e46.].

针对有中风风险因素的年轻成年非裔美国人开展外联活动。
背景:研究表明,年轻的成年非裔美国人(18-35 岁)患中风的风险是白人的两倍多。针对这一群体的脑卒中风险教育十分缺乏;针对非裔美国年轻人的针对性教育材料也十分匮乏。在开发和测试适合不同年龄和文化背景的健康扫盲材料方面也鲜有研究,而这些材料可帮助该人群更好地了解中风的个人风险因素:本研究旨在了解一些因素,以指导在非裔美国年轻人中创建和传播有关中风风险意识的通俗语言健康信息:年龄在 18 岁及以上的非裔美国人参与者完成了一项在线调查(N = 413)。采用描述性统计、单因素方差分析和两步聚类分析来评估中风风险意识、感知到的中风风险、信息创建因素和在线健康信息寻求行为。开放式调查项目描述了感知中风风险的可改变和不可改变的原因:参与者报告的中风风险感知对总体中风风险因素认识的差异显著(F[2, 409] = 4.91, p = .008),与中度组和高度/极高度组相比,极低/低度组(M = 1.66, p < .01)对总体中风风险因素的认识明显较低。认为自己中风风险很低/很低和中度/高度/很高的受访者都将家族史(分别为 54.1%和 45.9%)作为原因,88.2% 的很低/很低受访者认为自己没有中风风险因素是因为年轻。聚类分析显示,"基本明确偏好 "聚类更倾向于选择 "基本/非常明确 "正面、信息性、长 期信息和医学权威来源。三个群组中最大的群组报告称,医疗信息来源是寻找和信任健康信息的最高评级来源(47.2%,n = 195):结论:非裔美国年轻人对可改变的中风风险因素了解甚少;健康教育材料应侧重于由医学权威提供的、能显示长期效果的正面信息。我们在数据中没有观察到任何年龄或性别差异,这表明可能不需要不同的信息模式。[HLRP:《健康素养研究与实践》,2024;8(1):e38-e46]。
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
Health literacy research and practice
Health literacy research and practice Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
审稿时长
36 weeks
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