TY - JOUR
T1 - Explanatory models of diabetes in the U.S. and Mexico
T2 - The patient-provider gap and cultural competence
AU - Weller, Susan C.
AU - Baer, Roberta D.
AU - Garcia de Alba Garcia, Javier
AU - Salcedo Rocha, Ana L.
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding was provided by NSF # SBR 9727322 to SC Weller and SBR 9807373 to RD Baer; and CONACYT grant #34153-S to J. Garcia de Alba Garcia and A. Salcedo Rocha. An earlier version of this paper was presented at the meetings of the American Anthropology Association, November 2010.
PY - 2012/9
Y1 - 2012/9
N2 - Successful management of type 2 diabetes requires support and collaboration between diabetic patients, their health care providers, family and community. Using data collected in 1994-2001, we describe illness beliefs of physicians, patients, and representative samples of community members in the US and Mexico. We test whether differences in conceptualizations of diabetes are greater across national and linguistic boundaries or between physicians and lay groups. Interviews were conducted in southern Texas on the Mexican border and in Guadalajara, Mexico. Culturally appropriate interview materials were developed with a mixed-methods approach. Qualitative interviews elicited beliefs about causes, risks, symptoms, and treatments for diabetes and salient themes were incorporated into structured interviews. A cultural consensus analysis was used to verify salient themes within each of the six samples. The consistency in responses in each of the six samples indicated a shared core of beliefs that transcended individual variations. The greatest differences occurred between physician and lay samples; patient and community models were more similar to one another than to the physician models. Differences between physicians and patients may affect optimal management of diabetes, but these differences do not appear to be simply a function of differences in national culture and language, as the largest differences occurred in Mexico. This suggests that rather than cultural competence per se, formal educational levels and class differences may also play an important role in patient understanding and the gap in patient-provider understanding.
AB - Successful management of type 2 diabetes requires support and collaboration between diabetic patients, their health care providers, family and community. Using data collected in 1994-2001, we describe illness beliefs of physicians, patients, and representative samples of community members in the US and Mexico. We test whether differences in conceptualizations of diabetes are greater across national and linguistic boundaries or between physicians and lay groups. Interviews were conducted in southern Texas on the Mexican border and in Guadalajara, Mexico. Culturally appropriate interview materials were developed with a mixed-methods approach. Qualitative interviews elicited beliefs about causes, risks, symptoms, and treatments for diabetes and salient themes were incorporated into structured interviews. A cultural consensus analysis was used to verify salient themes within each of the six samples. The consistency in responses in each of the six samples indicated a shared core of beliefs that transcended individual variations. The greatest differences occurred between physician and lay samples; patient and community models were more similar to one another than to the physician models. Differences between physicians and patients may affect optimal management of diabetes, but these differences do not appear to be simply a function of differences in national culture and language, as the largest differences occurred in Mexico. This suggests that rather than cultural competence per se, formal educational levels and class differences may also play an important role in patient understanding and the gap in patient-provider understanding.
KW - Cultural consensus theory
KW - Diabetes mellitus
KW - Ethnicity
KW - Explanatory models
KW - Mexican-Americans
KW - Mexicans
KW - Mexico
KW - USA
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U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.05.003
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.05.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 22703883
AN - SCOPUS:84863531235
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 75
SP - 1088
EP - 1096
JO - Social Science and Medicine
JF - Social Science and Medicine
IS - 6
ER -