847 research outputs found
How can health promotion interventions be adapted for minority ethnic communities? Five principles for guiding the development of behavioural interventions.
The term ‘culturally sensitive’ is often used to describe interventions adapted for minority ethnic communities. However, understanding of strategies for adapting behavioural interventions for such communities is limited. The questions addressed in this paper are: What are the main strategies for adapting interventions to reduce coronary heart disease (CHD) for minority ethnic communities? Why have interventions been adapted in these ways? A systematic review was carried out to investigate interventions for preventing CHD, including promoting physical activity, smoking cessation and healthier diets in Pakistani, Chinese and Indian communities in countries where these groups are minorities. International databases and key websites were searched, and 23 477 titles and abstracts were initially identified. Seventeen papers met inclusion and quality criteria. A ‘meta-ethnographic’ approach to data synthesis was employed to identify underlying principles for adapting interventions. The rationale underpinning adaptations is not made explicit in individual studies, limiting generalizability. Five principles for adapting behavioural interventions for minority ethnic communities were identified: (i) use community resources to publicize the intervention and increase accessibility; (ii) identify and address barriers to access and participation; (iii) develop communication strategies which are sensitive to language use and information requirements; (iv) work with cultural or religious values that either promote or hinder behavioural change; and (v) accommodate varying degrees of cultural identification. While the principles require further testing and verification, they have been generated through a systematic approach to study identification, quality appraisal and data synthesis. This represents significant progress in advancing understanding of adapted behavioural interventions for minority ethnic communities
The use of tobacco and related substances in ethnic minorities : the development of a culturally valid measure
Introduction. Meeting the needs of migrant groups in Europe requires cross-culturally valid questionnaires, a substantial challenge to researchers. The Rose Angina Questionnaire (RAQ) is an important measure of coronary heart disease prevalence. It consists of seven items that collectively yield a diagnosis of angina. It has been shown to perform inconsistently across some ethnic groups in Britain. This study aimed to assess the need for modifying the RAQ for cross-culturally valid use in the three main ethnic groups in Scotland.Methods. Interviews were carried out with Pakistani Punjabi speakers (n=26), Chinese Cantonese speakers (n=29) and European-origin English speakers (n=25). Bilingual project workers interviewed participants and provided translation and commentary to the English-speaking researcher. Participants were asked about general and cardiovascular health beliefs and behaviours, and about attitudes to pain and chest pain. They were also asked to comment on their understanding of an existing version of the RAQ in their language.Results. No dominant themes in the cultural construction of health, pain or cardiovascular knowledge emerged that may significantly influence RAQ response between language groups. Problems were encountered with the Punjabi and Cantonese translations of the RAQ. For example, the translation for “chest” was interpreted by some Pakistani and fewer Chinese women to mean “breasts”. “Walking uphill” was translated in Chinese as “walking the hill”, without stipulation of the direction, so that some Cantonese speakers interpreted the question as meaning walking downhill. In addition, many Chinese interpreted RAQ items to be referring to breathlessness rather than chest pain due to ambiguous wording.Conclusion. Existing Punjabi and Cantonese versions of the RAQ should be modified before being used in multi-ethnic surveys. Current versions are unlikely to be yielding data that is comparable across groups. Other language versions also require similar investigation to study the cardiovascular health of Europe’s migrant groups.<br /
The global temperature-related mortality impact of earlier decarbonization for the Australian health sector and economy: A modelling study
Background: Sustained elevated concentration of GHGs is predicted to increase global mortality. With the Australian health sector responsible for 7% of the nation’s GHG emissions, the benefits and costs of various decarbonisation trajectories are currently being investigated. To assist with this effort, we model the impact earlier decarbonisation has on temperature-related mortality.
Design: We used DICE-EMR, an Integrated Assessment Model with an endogenous mortality response, to simulate Australian GHG trajectories and estimate the temperature-related mortality impact of early decarbonisation. We modelled a linear decline of the Australian health sector’s and economy’s GHG annual emissions to net-zero targets of 2040 and 2050.
Main outcome measure: Deaths averted and monetary-equivalent welfare gain.
Results: Decarbonisation of the Australian health sector by 2050 and 2040 is projected to avert an estimated 69,000 and 77,000 global temperature-related deaths respectively in a Baseline global emissions scenario. Australian economy decarbonisation by 2050 and 2040 is projected to avert an estimated 988,000 and 1,101,000 global deaths respectively. Assuming a low discount rate and high global emissions trajectory, we estimate a monetary equivalent welfare gain of $151 billion if the Australian health sector decarbonises by 2040, only accounting for the benefits in reducing temperature-related mortality.
Conclusions: Earlier decarbonisation has a significant impact on temperature-related mortality. Many uncertainties exist and health impacts other than temperature-related mortality are not captured by this analysis. Nevertheless, such models can help communicate the health risk of climate change and improve climate policy decision making.publishedVersio
Cohort profile: Scottish Health and Ethnicity Linkage Study of 4.65 million people exploring ethnic variations in disease in Scotland
Many countries require health services to show that
they are meeting the needs of ethnic minority
populations. This requires data on health status,
healthcare uptake and outcomes and population
denominators. Weaknesses in routine data collection
often make such requirements difficult to meet.
Routine data sources in Scotland, as in most countries,
may not include a patient’s ethnicity. In
Scotland, the need for such data is driven by both
policy and legislation responding to rapidly increasing
ethnic diversity. Fair For All (2003), Scotland’s policy,
provides a strategic approach to improve the health of
minority ethnic groups. The UK Race Relations
(Amendment) Act (2000) placed a duty on public
bodies to promote racial equality. These mandates
are reflected in guidance on ethnic monitoring.
Appropriate service and research is undermined by
the lack of data. Ethnic variations occur in all of
Scotland’s national health priority areas, including
coronary heart disease/stroke, cancer, maternal
and child health and mental health.
In view of the mismatch between need for and
availability of data by ethnic group, Bhopal proposed
a demonstration project to explore retrospective
approaches. The project tested proposals including
name search methods, analyses by country of birth,
modelling/extrapolation from other nations’ datasets,
and linkage methods. The demonstration project concluded
that census health records linkage methods—
in the context of this project first mooted by Povey—
held most promise. To our knowledge, attempting
matching of a national health dataset to a complete
national census using demographic identifiers rather
than national identity numbers had not been reported
though health data linkage is well-established in the
UK and internationally, including exploring ethnicity
and health
Medicine and public health in a multiethnic world
Achievement of medical and public health goals requires mutual understanding between professionals and the public, a challenge in diverse
societies. Despite their massive diversity humans belong to one species, with race and ethnicity used to subgroup/classify humans and manage
diversity. Classifications are contextual and vary by time, place and classifier. As classifications show major variations in health status, and risk
factors, research using race and ethnicity has accelerated. Medical sciences, including epidemiology, are learning fast to extract value from such
data. Among the debatable issues is the value of the relative risk versus absolute risk approaches (the latter is gaining ground), and how to assess
ethnicity and race (self-assignment is favoured in the UK and North America, country of birth in continental Europe). Racial and ethnic variations
in disease and risk factors are often large and usually unexplained. There is a compelling case for ethnic monitoring, despite its difficulties, for
tackling inequalities and as a foundation for research. Medical and public health goals require good data collected in a racism-free social environment.
Health professionals need to find the benefits of exploring differences while avoiding social division. Advances in health care, public health
and medical science will follo
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