Authors
Jason Q Purnell, Mira L Katz, Barbara L Andersen, Oxana Palesh, Colmar Figueroa-Moseley, Pascal Jean-Pierre, Nancy Bennett
Publication date
2010/2
Journal
Journal of Behavioral Medicine
Volume
33
Pages
24-34
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Models that explain preventive behaviors, such as colorectal cancer (CRC) screening, do not account for social and cultural factors relevant to African Americans. This exploratory study examined the relationship between socio-cultural factors (e.g., traditional acculturative strategy, group-based medical mistrust, physician ethnicity, and group-level perceptions of susceptibility) and perceived benefits, perceived barriers, and CRC screening intentions among African Americans (N = 198; Age: M = 59.7, SD = 9.9; 65% female; 44% household income $50,000+). Hierarchical multiple regression was used to test the following models with perceived benefits, perceived barriers, and screening intentions as the outcomes: (a) traditional acculturative strategy × medical mistrust; (b) physician’s ethnicity × medical mistrust; (c) group susceptibility × medical mistrust; and (d) group susceptibility × traditional acculturative …
Total citations
2010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202315810853985345