International Journal of Nursing Studies
Volume 47, Issue 8 , Pages 975-983 , August 2010

Distrust, predisposition to use health services and breast cancer screening: Results from a multicultural community-based survey

  • Maria C. Katapodi

      Affiliations

    • Division of Acute, Critical, and Long Term Care, University of Michigan School of Nursing, 400 N. Ingalls Building, Room 2158, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, United States
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 734 647 0178; fax: +1 734 936 5525.
  • ,
  • Penny F. Pierce

      Affiliations

    • Division of Acute, Critical, and Long Term Care, University of Michigan School of Nursing, 400 N. Ingalls Building, Room 2158, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, United States
  • ,
  • Noreen C. Facione

      Affiliations

    • Insight Assessment, California Academic Press, United States

Received 28 March 2009 ,Revised 9 November 2009 ,Accepted 22 December 2009.

References 

  1. Aarts H, Verplanken B, van Knippenberg A. Predicting behavior from actions in the past: repeated decision making or a matter of habit?. Journal of Applied Social Psychology. 1998;28(15):1355–1374
  2. American Cancer Society, 2009. Cancer Facts and Figures Retrieved February 20, 2009, from www.cancer.org.
  3. Andersen R, Newman JF. Societal and individual determinants of medical care utilization in the United States. Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. 1973;51:95–102
  4. Bartlett MS. A note on the multiplying factor for various chi square approximations. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. 1954;16(Series B):296–298
  5. Blanchard J, Lurie N. R-E-S-P-E-C-T: patient reports of disrespect in the health care setting and its impact on care. The Journal of Family Practice. 2004;53(9):721–730
  6. Boyles G, Moore AD, Edwards QT. Health practices of male Department of Defense health care beneficieries: a follow up on prostate cancer screening in the national capital area. Military Medicine. 2003;168(12):992–996
  7. Breen N, Kessler LG, Brown ML. Breast cancer control among the underserved: an overview. Breast Cancer Research and Treatment. 1996;40(1):105–115
  8. CDC, C.f.D.C. . Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS): 2001 Survey Questions. 2002;(retrieved April, 2002) www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/brfss/brfsques-questionnaires.htm
  9. Cohen J, Cohen P, West DW, Aiken LS. Centering predictors and the interpretation of regression coefficients in equations containing interactions. In:  Cohen J,  Cohen P,  West DW,  Aiken LS editor. Applied Multiple/Regression Correlation Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum; 2002;p. 261–272
  10. Cvetkovich GT, Siegrist M, Murray RP, Tragesser S. New information and social trust. Asymmetry and perseverance of attributions about hazard managers. Risk Analysis. 2002;22(2):359–367
  11. Ding EL, Powe NR, Manson JE, Sherber NS, Braunstein JB. Sex differences in perceived risks, distrust, and willingness to participate in clinical trials. Archives of Internal Medicine. 2007;167(May):905–912
  12. Facione NC, Facione PA. Perceived prejudice in healthcare and women's health protective behaviors. Nursing Research. 2007;56(3):175–184
  13. Facione NC, Katapodi MC. Culture as an influence on breast cancer screening and early detection. Seminars in Oncology Nursing. 2000;16(3):237–238
  14. Facione NC, Miaskowski C, Dodd MJ, Paul S. The self-reported likelihood of patient delay in breast cancer: new thoughts for early detection. Preventive Medicine. 2002;34:397–407
  15. Ford ME, Alford SH, Britton D, McClary B, Gordon HS. Factors influencing perceptions of breast cancer genetic counseling among women in an urban health care system. Journal of Genetic Counseling. 2007;16:735–753
  16. Forrester-Anderson IT. Prostate cancer screening perceptions, knowledge, and behaviors among African-American men: focus groups findings. Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved. 2005;16(4 Suppl.):22–30
  17. George SA. Barriers to breast cancer screening: an integrative review. Health Care for Women International. 2000;21(1):53–65
  18. Gilson L. Trust and the development of health care as a social institution. Social Science and Medicine. 2003;56:1453–1468
  19. Greiner KA, Born W, Nollen N, Ahluwalia JS. Knowledge and perceptions of colorectal cancer screening among urban African Americans. Journal of General Internal Medicine. 2005;20(11):977–983
  20. Hosmer DW, Lemeshow S. Goodness of fit tests for the multiple logistic regression model. Communications in Statistics: Part A. Theory and Methods. 1980;9(10):1043–1069
  21. Jones RA, Wenzel J. Prostate cancer among African-American males: understanding the current issues. Journal of the National Black Nurses Association. 2005;16(1):55–62
  22. Kaiser H. An index of factorial simplicity. Psychometrika. 1974;39(1):31–36
  23. Katapodi MC, Dodd M, Facione NC, Humphreys JC, Lee KA. Why some women have an optimistic or a pessimistic bias about breast cancer risk? Experiences, heuristics, and knowledge of risk factors. Cancer Nursing. 2010;33(1):64–73
  24. Katapodi MC, Dodd MJ, Lee KA, Facione NC. Underestimation of breast cancer risk: influence on breast cancer screening. Oncology Nursing Forum. 2009;36(3):306–314
  25. Mechanic D, Meyer S. Concepts of trust among patients with serious illness. Social Science and Medicine. 2000;51:657–668
  26. Miller AM, Champion VL. Mammography in older women: one-time and three-year adherence to guidelines. Nursing Research. 1996;45:239–245
  27. O’Malley AS, Sheppard VB, Schwartz MD, Mandelblatt J. The role of trust in use of preventive services among low-income African-American women. Preventive Medicine. 2004;38:777–785
  28. Ouellette JA, Wood W. Habit and intention in everyday life: the multiple processes by which past behavior predicts future behavior. Psychological Bulletin. 1998;124:54–74
  29. Poortinga W, Pidgeon NF. Trust, the asymmetry principle, and the role of prior beliefs. Risk Analysis. 2004;24(6):1475–1486
  30. Rajaram SS, Rashidi A. Minority women and breast cancer screening: the role of cultural explanatory models. Preventive Medicine. 1998;27:757–764
  31. Remmenich L. The challenge of early breast cancer detection among immigrant and minority women in multicultural societies. The Breast Journal. 2006;12(Suppl. 1):S103–S110
  32. Ronis DL, Yates JF, Kirscht JP. Attitudes, decisions, and habits as determinants of repeated behavior. In:  Pratkanis AR,  Breckler SJ,  Greenwald AG editor. Attitude Structure and Function. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum; 1989;p. 213–239
  33. Samsa G, Edelman D, Rothman ML, Williams R, Lipscomb J, Matchar D. Determining clinically important differences in health status measures. Pharmacoeconomics. 1999;15(2):141–155
  34. Sharf BF, Stelljes LA, Gordon HS. “A little bitty spot and I’m a big man”: patients’ perspectives on refusing diagnosis or treatment for lung cancer. Psycho-Oncology. 2005;14:636–646
  35. Slovic P. Trust, emotion, sex, politics, and science: surveying the risk-assessment battlefield. Risk Analysis. 1999;19(4):689–701
  36. Thorne SA, Robinson CA. Guarded alliance: health care relationships in the chronic illness. Journal of Nursing Scholarship. 1989;21(3):153–157
  37. Triandis CH. Values, attitudes, and interpersonal behavior. In:  Howe HE,  Page MM editor. Nebraska Symposium on Motivation. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska; 1980;
  38. US Census . San Francisco Bay Area Census. 2000;(retrieved July 25, 2004) http://www.bayareacensus.ca.gov/bayarea.htm
  39. Waljee JF, Hu ES, Newman LA, Alderman AK. Correlates of patient satisfaction and provider trust after breast-conserving surgery. Cancer. 2008;112(8):1679–1687
  40. White MP, Eiser JR. Information specificity and hazard risk potential as moderators of trust asymmetry. Risk Analysis. 2005;25(5):1187–1198
  41. White MP, Pahl S, Buehner MJ, Haye A. Trust in risky messages: the role of prior attitudes. Risk Analysis. 2003;23(4):717–726

PII: S0020-7489(09)00406-4

doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2009.12.014

International Journal of Nursing Studies
Volume 47, Issue 8 , Pages 975-983 , August 2010