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1.
Health Commun ; : 1-9, 2024 Jul 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39014906

RESUMEN

Whakapapa is an Indigenous metatheoretical framework; a phenomenon of metaphysical and social connections embedded in Indigenous epistemology unique to Aotearoa New Zealand (Aotearoa NZ). This research foregrounds the innate connection between Maori, land, health, and wellbeing as an expression of Whakapapa, nuanced through the layering of lived experience and sensemaking of 30 Maori participants, situated in dialogue with the culture-centered approach (CCA). Noting the erasure of Maori voices from the hegemonic frame of health communication in the settler colonial state, we sought to understand health and wellbeing meanings, challenges and solutions as articulated by Maori participants at the margins of Indigeneity. Drawing on the CCA approach to health communication, the manuscript highlights the relationship between Whakapapa and voice. The dialogs emergent from in-depth interviews place the CCA in dialogue with the Whakapapa paradigm, foregrounding the role of voice democracy in creating anchors to health and wellbeing among Maori, rooted in tino rangatiratanga (sovereignty). The articulations of Maori health voiced from/at the margins are offered as interventions into the large-scale health inequities experienced by Maori in Aotearoa NZ.

2.
Health Commun ; : 1-9, 2024 Apr 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38632707

RESUMEN

In this issue, we outline the central tenets of the culture-centered approach to health communication. What does the culture-centered approach address when suggesting the co-creation of voice infrastructures? What is the theory's methodological emphasis for mobilizing and transforming structures that shape health inequalities for communities at the margins? Drawing on examples of culture-centered interventions in over fifty communities spread across 17 countries and three continents, a large number of them housed under the umbrella of the Center for Culture-centered Approach to Research and Evaluation (CARE) at Massey University in Aotearoa, New Zealand, we articulate the communicative processes (referring to actionable sources and targets of communicative action) that shape the building of voice infrastructures mobilizing toward structural transformation. For instance, African American communities organizing under the framework of the culture-centered approach, documented in Dutta, Collins, and colleagues study in 2019, discuss the building of voice infrastructures where community members participate in co-creating heart health information based on comparative effectiveness research, building an African American media ecosystem disseminating the information alongside community-led initiatives growing healthy food, community-led youth activities, and activism addressing the racist structural drivers that adversely impact African American heart health. In this essay, we describe the impact of culture-centered interventions reflected in the voice infrastructures within communities that witness and articulate the oppressions that threaten human health at the margins and in the transformations of these structures that organize various facets of life and livelihood at the global margins linked to health.

3.
Health Commun ; : 1-9, 2024 Jun 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38918887

RESUMEN

The transgender sex worker experience of health in Singapore is multidimensional, working at the intersections of culture, social class, and gendered marginalization. Drawing on in-depth interviews with transgender sex workers in the context of Singapore's extreme neoliberalism and located within a larger culture-centered intervention that emerged through an academic-activist-community partnership, this study foregrounds the everyday meanings of health among transgender sex workers who are marginalized. We offer a discursive register for theorizing violence as disruption of health. Participants narrate health as the negotiation of stigmas coded into their everyday lives, the forms of material violence they experience, and the struggles with accessing secure housing. The theorizing of violence as threat to health by transgender sex workers shapes the health advocacy and health activism that takes the form of a 360 degrees campaign. This essay pushes the literature on the culture-centered approach (CCA) by centering voice as the basis for structurally transformative articulations amidst neoliberal authoritarianism.

4.
Health Commun ; : 1-8, 2023 Dec 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38131212

RESUMEN

Culture-centered studies of health communication de-center the theorization of health as an individual behavior and reveal the structural conditions that shape inequalities in health outcomes. The present study examines the ways in which space and housing shape experiences of health in a low-income site in Auckland undergoing radical redevelopment. We draw from a culture-centered project undertaken in 2018-2021 predominantly among Maori and Pasifika peoples involving 60 initial in-depth interviews, seven focus groups, a series of filmed interviews, and 32 additional in-depth interviews conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic. The residents' narratives foregrounded the detrimental health impact of inadequate housing, financial constraints, transience, and displacement that severs ties to place and community. These findings reveal the relationship between housing challenges, economic marginalization, and neoliberal capitalism, highlighting the need for policy interventions to address housing as a fundamental determinant of health disparities among marginalized communities.

5.
Health Commun ; 38(3): 460-467, 2023 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34325580

RESUMEN

The consistent association between regular physical exercise and positive health outcomes presents a compelling case for investigating the differences between individuals who exercise regularly and those who do not. Based on a randomized cross-sectional survey of 1,201 households, this study adopts a psychographic framework to investigate the role of health orientation in physical exercise behavior. This study extends the concept of health orientation, operationalized as five psychographic subscales (health information orientation, preventative orientation, exercise orientation, healthy eating orientation, and health information efficacy) as well as three behavioral constructs (sedentary behavior, BMI and cigarette smoking) to understand physical exercise behavior. The results show significant differences between regular exercisers and non-exercisers, and suggest that a psychographic framework based on health orientation could offer a more holistic approach for understanding physical exercise behavior by highlighting the treatment of the whole individual. Physical exercise, as a specific health behavior, is in fact interlinked with other health behaviors through an underlying health orientation toward health issues in general.


Asunto(s)
Ejercicio Físico , Conductas Relacionadas con la Salud , Humanos , Estudios Transversales , Conducta Sedentaria
6.
Health Commun ; 37(12): 1503-1509, 2022 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35996960

RESUMEN

COVID-19 has exacerbated existing health inequalities globally. Guided by the culture-centered approach, this study examined perspectives and experiences of healthcare during two lockdowns in four marginalized contexts in Aotearoa New Zealand. The participants' narratives depicted dissatisfaction with the new modes of healthcare delivery, reporting longer waiting times, a preference for face-to-face delivery, language barriers, and issues with the limitations in support people attending appointments. This resulted in healthcare being delivered in a way that was not in keeping with the localized cultural norms of communication and collective support, further exacerbating existing health inequalities. Our findings suggest that public health interventions in response to COVID-19 within the context of healthcare delivery have the potential to further reify and reproduce exclusions and experiences of marginalization, with cultural marginalization reifying structural marginalization.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , COVID-19/epidemiología , Control de Enfermedades Transmisibles , Barreras de Comunicación , Atención a la Salud , Humanos , Pobreza
7.
Health Commun ; 36(1): 109-115, 2021 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33222539

RESUMEN

Aotearoa New Zealand's public health crisis communication approach amidst the COVID-19 pandemic effectively mobilized the nation into swift lockdown, significantly reducing community transmission. This communication approach has been applauded around the world. How did communities situated amongst the "margins of the margins" in Aotearoa New Zealand navigate through the existing structural barriers to health during the pandemic? In this study, we use a culture-centered analysis to foreground the structural context of disenfranchisement amidst the COVID-19 lockdown. Drawing on in-depth interviews with participants in a larger ethnographic project on poverty and health across three communities in Aotearoa New Zealand, we attend to the ways in which health is negotiated amidst the COVID-19 outbreak and lockdown response at the "margins of the margins." The narratives point out that health communication interventions to prevent COVID-19 in the context of Aotearoa New Zealand furthered the marginalization of communities at the margins, and community voices were largely erased from the enactment of interventions. With the extant structures failing to recognize these aspects of everyday struggles of health at the margins, the health and access challenges were further magnified during COVID-19. Our attention to communication situated in relationship to structures builds a register for health communication scholarship in the context of COVID-19 that is committed to disrupting the behaviorally based hegemonic health communication literature and transforming the unequal terrains of health experiences.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/etnología , COVID-19/psicología , Control de Enfermedades Transmisibles/métodos , Pobreza/psicología , Pobreza/estadística & datos numéricos , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Antropología Cultural , Comunicación , Competencia Cultural , Femenino , Humanos , Entrevistas como Asunto , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Nativos de Hawái y Otras Islas del Pacífico , Negociación , Nueva Zelanda/epidemiología , Pandemias , SARS-CoV-2 , Factores Socioeconómicos , Poblaciones Vulnerables , Adulto Joven
8.
Am Behav Sci ; 65(10): 1302-1322, 2021 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38603114

RESUMEN

I draw on the key tenets of the culture-centered approach to co-construct the everyday negotiations of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) among low-wage male Bangladeshi migrant workers in Singapore. The culture-centered approach foregrounds voices infrastructures at the margins as the basis for theorizing health. Based on 87 hours of participant observations of digital spaces and 47 in-depth interviews, I attend to the exploitative conditions of migrant work that constitute the COVID-19 outbreak in the dormitories housing low-wage migrant workers. These exploitative conditions are intertwined with authoritarian techniques of repression deployed by the state that criminalize worker collectivization and erase worker voices. The principle of academic-worker-activist solidarity offers a register for alternative imaginaries of health that intervene directly in Singapore's extreme neoliberalism.

9.
Health Commun ; 35(5): 616-627, 2020 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30786730

RESUMEN

Community-based participatory research (CBPR) has captured public health attention and support because it is positioned as an approach that involves researchers and communities as equitable partners in addressing health disparities. However, it is unknown the extent to which CBPR creates a participatory space in the scientific discourse to signal "community voice," which we define as textual expression of community-centered perspectives on collective roles, interests, and worldviews. In this study, we utilized the culture-centered approach to examine the expression of community voice in the abstracts and public health relevance statements of 253 extramural CBPR projects in the U.S. that received funding from the National Institute of Health and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2009. We found that project abstracts and public health relevance statements contain four textual domains, or potential sites of contest to signal the articulation of community agency and voice within the CBPR projects. These domains include: 1) the rationale for the community health issue, 2) the roles of community partners, 3) community-centered outcomes of the partnership, and 4) elements of participatory research process. The degree of culture-centeredness of the texts is suggested in the extent to which articulations of community agency and voice are signaled across the four domains. We conclude that the dynamics of CBPR may shape culture-centered expressions of problem identification, solution configuration, structural transformations, reflexivity, values, and agency in the project abstracts and public health relevance statements.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Participativa Basada en la Comunidad , Investigación Participativa Basada en la Comunidad/organización & administración , Humanos
10.
Health Educ Res ; 34(4): 372-388, 2019 08 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31237937

RESUMEN

Health education research emphasizes the importance of cultural understanding and fit to achieve meaningful psycho-social research outcomes, community responsiveness and external validity to enhance health equity. However, many interventions address cultural fit through cultural competence and sensitivity approaches that are often superficial. The purpose of this study was to better situate culture within health education by operationalizing and testing new measures of the deeply grounded culture-centered approach (CCA) within the context of community-based participatory research (CBPR). A nation-wide mixed method sample of 200 CBPR partnerships included a survey questionnaire and in-depth case studies. The questionnaire enabled the development of a CCA scale using concepts of community voice/agency, reflexivity and structural transformation. Higher-order confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated factorial validity of the scale. Correlations supported convergent validity with positive associations between the CCA and partnership processes and capacity and health outcomes. Qualitative data from two CBPR case studies provided complementary socio-cultural historic background and cultural knowledge, grounding health education interventions and research design in specific contexts and communities. The CCA scale and case study analysis demonstrate key tools that community-academic research partnerships can use to assess deeper levels of culture centeredness for health education research.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Participativa Basada en la Comunidad , Cultura , Educación en Salud , Promoción de la Salud , Femenino , Grupos Focales , Promoción de la Salud/métodos , Humanos , Masculino , Encuestas y Cuestionarios
11.
Health Commun ; 34(10): 1075-1084, 2019 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29634356

RESUMEN

This study highlights the role of local communities in creating culturally rooted health information resources based on comparative effectiveness research (CER), depicting the role of culture in creating entry points for building community-grounded communication structures for evidence-based health knowledge. We report the results from running a year-long culture-centered campaign that was carried out among African American communities in two counties, Lake and Marion County, in Indiana addressing basic evidence-based knowledge on four areas of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Campaign effectiveness was tested through an experimental design with post-test knowledge of CER among African Americans in these counties compared to CER knowledge among African Americans in a comparable control county (Allen). Our campaign, based on the principles of the culture-centered approach (CCA), increased community CER knowledge in the experimental communities relative to a community that did not receive the culturally centered health information campaign. The CCA-based campaign developed by community members and distributed through the mass media, community wide channels such as health fairs and church meetings, postcards, and face-to-face interventions explaining the postcards improved CER knowledge in specific areas (ACE-I/ARBs, atrial fibrillation, and renal artery stenosis) in the CCA communities as compared to the control community.


Asunto(s)
Negro o Afroamericano , Enfermedades Cardiovasculares/etnología , Participación de la Comunidad/métodos , Conocimientos, Actitudes y Práctica en Salud , Promoción de la Salud/organización & administración , Difusión de la Información/métodos , Enfermedades Cardiovasculares/diagnóstico , Enfermedades Cardiovasculares/prevención & control , Comunicación , Investigación sobre la Eficacia Comparativa/organización & administración , Carencia Cultural , Práctica Clínica Basada en la Evidencia , Disparidades en el Estado de Salud , Humanos , Indiana , Participación del Paciente
12.
BMC Womens Health ; 18(1): 56, 2018 04 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29661196

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: There is increasing knowledge of sex-specific differences in cardiovascular disease and recognition of sex disparities in management. In our study, we investigated whether a cardiovascular programme tailored to the specific needs of women could lead to improved outcomes. METHODS: We randomised 100 female patients to receive cardiology follow-up with the conventional sex-neutral cardiac programme (control), or the sex-tailored Women's Heart Health Programme (intervention). The intervention group was managed by an all-women multidisciplinary team and received culture-centred health intervention workshops, designed through in-depth interviews with the participants. The primary outcome was cardiovascular risk factor improvement at 1 year. Secondary outcomes include cardiovascular event rates, quality of life scores, and self-reported improvement in knowledge, attitudes, intentions and practices. Generalised structural equation model analysis was used to determine if the intervention group had better outcomes at alpha level 0.1. RESULTS: The mean age was 67.3 ± 12.7 years, with an ethnic distribution of 70% Chinese, 18% Malays, and 12% Indians. The majority of these patients had no formal or primary level of education (63%), and were mostly unemployed (78%). Patients in intervention group had better control of diabetes mellitus (lower HbA1c of 0.63% [CI 0.21-1.04], p = 0.015) and lower body-mass-index (0.74 kg/m2 [CI 0.02-1.46], p = 0.092) at 1 year, but there was no significant difference in blood pressure or lipid control. Overall, there was a trend towards better risk factor control, 31.6% of intervention group versus 26.5% of control group achieved improvement in at least 1 CV risk factor control to target range. There was no significant difference in incidence of cardiovascular events, quality of life, or domains in knowledge, attitudes, intention and practices. CONCLUSION: This pilot study is the first of its kind evaluating a new model of care for women with heart disease. The potential to improve outcomes needs to be studied in a larger trial with longer follow up. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This trial was prospectively registered clinicaltrials.gov on 6 May 2013. Trial Number: 2013/00088. Identifier: NCT02017470.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades Cardiovasculares/prevención & control , Conocimientos, Actitudes y Práctica en Salud , Promoción de la Salud , Educación del Paciente como Asunto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Presión Sanguínea , Índice de Masa Corporal , Diabetes Mellitus/sangre , Femenino , Hemoglobina Glucada/metabolismo , Humanos , Lipoproteínas HDL/sangre , Lipoproteínas LDL/sangre , Persona de Mediana Edad , Proyectos Piloto , Calidad de Vida , Factores de Riesgo , Factores Sexuales , Salud de la Mujer
13.
J Health Commun ; 23(7): 614-623, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30064349

RESUMEN

Stigma and discrimination are primary drivers of health disparities among marginalized communities. Drawing on stigma management, minority stress model, and social cognitive theories, this article tests the interplay between dimensions of stigma, collective efficacy, and advocacy communication among men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender females. Using data from a cross-sectional survey conducted in south India (N = 225), five distinct dimensions of stigma were identified using factor analysis: experienced stigma, self-stigma, felt normative stigma, and two new dimensions-HIV-related vicarious stigma and media stigma. Respondents reported highest levels of media stigma. While most of the dimensions of stigma were negatively associated with both collective efficacy and advocacy communication, collective efficacy mediated the relationship between stigma and advocacy. Implications for public health campaigns among MSM groups are discussed.


Asunto(s)
Procesos de Grupo , Infecciones por VIH/psicología , Comunicación en Salud/métodos , Homosexualidad Masculina/psicología , Estigma Social , Personas Transgénero/psicología , Adulto , Estudios Transversales , Femenino , Infecciones por VIH/epidemiología , Infecciones por VIH/prevención & control , Humanos , India/epidemiología , Masculino
14.
J Health Commun ; 23(3): 254-263, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29436966

RESUMEN

Our paper extends channel complementarity theory, which has focused on evidence of complementarity and patterns of channel use, by elucidating the notion of trust complementarity. We examined trust, an information-carrier characteristic and a core construct in health-focused decision-making to understand cancer information seeking, based on data from two nationally representative surveys in Singapore. Trust is found to be differential, relational, and ecological, with implications for individuals' access to and reliance on doctors, family/friends, newspapers/magazines, radio, TV, and the Internet for cancer prevention information. In an ideal trust complementarity environment, an individual should be able to traverse a range of communication channels seamlessly. Our findings however suggest that although individuals trust different channels complementarily, their trust patterns are limited and fettered. We identified two types of trust ecologies shaped by dual-channel and polymorphic complementarity patterns that suggest that health information seekers are trapped within specific trust ecologies that prevent them from navigating a broader range of communication channels for cancer prevention.


Asunto(s)
Información de Salud al Consumidor/estadística & datos numéricos , Conducta en la Búsqueda de Información , Neoplasias/prevención & control , Confianza/psicología , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Teoría Psicológica , Singapur , Adulto Joven
15.
Health Commun ; 33(4): 433-442, 2018 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28151015

RESUMEN

This article seeks to contribute to the literature on health information seeking (HIS) by culturally locating the search for health information within the local contexts of everyday life in Singapore, and within the meaning-making processes that individuals participate in. Based on in-depth interviews with 100 participants selected through stratified sampling, it asks: How do Singaporeans make sense of HIS in the realm of their everyday lived experiences? The study contributes to the literature on the roles familial ties play in information gathering and sharing in a collective context. More importantly, these familial ties provide perspective on the ways in which culture spatio-temporally constitutes HIS. HIS is informed by familial role expectations in a collectivist context where filial piety and "respect for the elderly" are guiding anchors for behavior. Moreover, harmony and community well-being define societal roles and responsibilities of caregiving, directed broadly at communal care. These collective-oriented contexts therefore inform HIS.


Asunto(s)
Características Culturales , Comunicación en Salud , Conducta en la Búsqueda de Información , Relaciones Intergeneracionales , Internet , Adulto , Anciano , Etnicidad , Familia , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Investigación Cualitativa , Singapur
16.
Health Commun ; 33(5): 643-652, 2018 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28353364

RESUMEN

Economic migration is integral to processes of globalization, with large numbers of the global poor moving across borders in search of employment in the face of structural adjustment programs and large-scale displacement of the poor from traditional forms of livelihood. One such group are foreign domestic workers (FDWs). In this culture-centered study, we listen to the voices of FDWs in Singapore to understand the key meanings of health held by this group of migrant workers as they negotiate living and working in Singapore. Through the representation of FDW voices at sites where they have previously been excluded, we hope to co-create participatory spaces in national discourse so that policies and interventions can be developed to address the health needs of FDWs. The results represented in this essay are part of a larger project engaging the CCA to foster communicative platforms for structural transformation.


Asunto(s)
Características Culturales , Empleo , Estado de Salud , Migrantes/psicología , Cuidado del Niño , Preescolar , Femenino , Abastecimiento de Alimentos , Tareas del Hogar , Humanos , Internacionalidad , Entrevistas como Asunto , Singapur
17.
J Health Commun ; 22(sup1): 10-14, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28854138

RESUMEN

This brief essay is a commentary on how critical health communication theory can contribute to an understanding of the cultural dynamics of infectious disease pandemics. In particular, we focus on a specific trajectory of health communication theorizing-the culture-centered approach-and its heuristic and pragmatic utility in enhancing knowledge about public health crises like infectious disease outbreaks. In the backdrop of the mobilizations against the 2014 Ebola virus disease epidemic in the 3 West African nations of Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia, indigenous cultural practices were construed as pathogenic and local agency of affected communities disregarded, even as the global risks of the epidemic were highlighted. In contrast to this interventionist notion of culture, the culture-centered approach offers a heuristic rubric through which to scrutinize the dialectical interrelationship between indigenous cultural practices, structural determinants of health, and the everyday agency of individuals of affected communities. We argue that such a listening-based paradigm of communication theorizing is instrumental in developing authentic, ethical, and effective health communication practice in public health crises.


Asunto(s)
Características Culturales , Epidemias/prevención & control , Comunicación en Salud/métodos , Fiebre Hemorrágica Ebola/prevención & control , Teoría Social , África Occidental/epidemiología , Fiebre Hemorrágica Ebola/epidemiología , Humanos
18.
Health Commun ; 32(4): 483-492, 2017 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27301884

RESUMEN

This article examined channel complementarity in health information seeking among Internet users in India. It posited that online users complementarily use different channels to search for health information. Based on the existing literature, it suggested that age is an important moderator of different channels as health information sources. Data regarding the consumption of 11 different channels were collected from nearly 1,000 Internet users. The results demonstrated complementary use of different channels as health information sources in relationship to the Internet as a health information source, except for newspapers and family members. Moreover, not supporting our hypothesis regarding the sources of health information among online users, the Internet was surprisingly not the primary source of health information, being shadowed by the predominant and significantly greater use of newspapers as sources of health information among online users in India. Extending the theory of channel complementarity, we found that age is an important moderator of complementary relationships among various channels as health information sources, demonstrating that younger users were more likely to use greater numbers of channels complementarily as compared to older users. Contributions to channel complementarity and implications of research are discussed on the basis of the findings.


Asunto(s)
Información de Salud al Consumidor/métodos , Conducta en la Búsqueda de Información , Adolescente , Adulto , Distribución por Edad , Familia , Femenino , Personal de Salud , Humanos , India , Internet , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Periódicos como Asunto , Factores Socioeconómicos , Adulto Joven
19.
Health Commun ; 32(8): 954-962, 2017 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27463999

RESUMEN

Food insecurity is a form of health disparity that results in adverse health outcomes, particularly among disenfranchised and vulnerable populations. Using the culture-centered approach, this article engages with issues of food insecurity, health, and poverty among the low-income community in Singapore. Through 30 in-depth interviews, the narratives of the food insecure are privileged in articulating their lived experiences of food insecurity and in co-constructing meanings of health informed by their sociocultural context, in a space that typically renders them invisible. Arguing that poverty is communicatively sustained through the erasure of subaltern voices from mainstream discourses and policy platforms, we ask the research question: What are the meanings of food insecurity in the everyday experiences of health among the poor in Singapore? Our findings demonstrate that the meanings of health among the food insecure are constituted in culture and materiality, structurally constrained, and ultimately complexify their negotiations of health and health decision making.


Asunto(s)
Abastecimiento de Alimentos/economía , Estado de Salud , Pobreza , Población Urbana , Adulto , Anciano , Composición Familiar , Femenino , Teoría Fundamentada , Humanos , Entrevistas como Asunto , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Singapur
20.
Health Commun ; 32(10): 1241-1251, 2017 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27484329

RESUMEN

Across the life course, African Americans bear an unequal burden of disease compared to other racial groups. In spite of the widespread acknowledgment of racial health disparities, the voices of African Americans, their articulations of health and their local etiologies of health disparities are limited. In this article, we highlight the important role of communication scholarship to understand the everyday enactment of health disparities. Drawing upon the culture-centered approach (CCA) to co-construct narratives of health with African Americans residents of Lake County, Indiana, we explore the presence of stress in the everyday narratives of health. These narratives voice the social and structural sources of stress, and articulate resistive coping strategies embedded in relationship to structures.


Asunto(s)
Negro o Afroamericano/estadística & datos numéricos , Disparidades en el Estado de Salud , Narración , Estrés Psicológico/psicología , Adaptación Psicológica , Enfermedades Cardiovasculares/etnología , Enfermedades Cardiovasculares/mortalidad , Humanos , Indiana , Entrevistas como Asunto
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