采用“最重要的是什么”来评估越南河内艾滋病毒感染者中交叉艾滋病毒相关和癌症耻辱的文化方面的三个量表的发展和心理测量特性。

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Evan L Eschliman, Yuexuan Liu, Asri A Rahmah, Briyanna Philip, Dung T Hoang, Haruka Kokaze, Nasim Khoshnam, Emily Dunkel, Vivian R Ye, Karen Choe, Ohemaa B Poku, Gloria Alvarez, Trang Nguyen, Nam Truong Nguyen, Donna Shelley, Lawrence H Yang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

【摘要】艾滋病毒感染者具有不成比例的癌症风险,是包括越南在内的全球癌症预防和控制工作的重点人群。与艾滋病毒相关的耻辱感和癌症耻辱感单独地和交叉地阻碍了预防和治疗的获得和接受。采用“最重要的是什么”理论框架和认知访谈的形成性定性研究,我们为越南河内的艾滋病毒感染者开发了三种文化定制的耻辱感量表(即预期交叉的艾滋病毒相关和癌症耻辱感,内化的艾滋病毒相关耻辱感和公共癌症耻辱感[即消极的社区态度])。研究人员对100名艾滋病毒感染者和现有广泛使用的污名化量表以及与癌症预防相关的措施进行了测试。初步的心理测量验证表明,每个量表都有两个子量表,反映了文化方面如何塑造和防止耻辱感,具有较强的信度(α = 0.76-0.91, ω = 0.78-0.91),并且与相应的hiv相关的内化耻辱感和公共癌症耻辱感的现有量表具有较强的趋同效度。与现有的公共癌症耻感量表相比,文化定制的交叉和仅限癌症的量表与测量的癌症预防相关结构的相关性至少同样高。根据文化量身定制的交叉尺度可以帮助监测和解决耻辱感,最终促进艾滋病毒和癌症的预防、控制和治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Development and psychometric properties of three scales employing "what matters most" to assess cultural aspects of intersectional HIV-related and cancer stigma among people living with HIV in Hanoi, Vietnam.

ABSTRACTPeople living with HIV have disproportionate cancer risk and are a priority population for cancer prevention and control efforts globally, including in Vietnam. HIV-related and cancer stigma independently and intersectionally hinder access to and uptake of prevention and treatment. Using formative qualitative research that used the "What Matters Most" theoretical framework and cognitive interviewing, we developed three culturally-tailored stigma scales for people living with HIV in Hanoi, Vietnam (i.e., for anticipated intersectional HIV-related and cancer stigma, internalized HIV-related stigma, and public cancer stigma [i.e., negative community attitudes]). Scales were administered to 100 people living with HIV alongside existing widely-used stigma scales and measures of cancer prevention-related constructs. This initial psychometric validation supported that each scale has two subscales reflecting how cultural aspects both shape and protect against stigma, strong reliability (ranging from α = 0.76-0.91, ω = 0.78-0.91), and strong convergent validity with corresponding existing scales for internalized HIV-related stigma and public cancer stigma. The culturally-tailored intersectional and cancer-only scales were correlated at least as highly with the measured cancer prevention-related constructs compared to the existing public cancer stigma scale. Culturally-tailored, intersectional scales could help monitor and address stigma, ultimately promoting HIV and cancer prevention, control, and treatment.

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CiteScore
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