Consumer Approach to Acculturation and Complementary/Alternative Medication: Differences between English Speakers, English Speakers of Color, and Spanish Speakers of Color

IF 1.2 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences Pub Date : 2021-02-01 DOI:10.1177/0739986321996140
R. Cancio
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Abstract

The current study implements a qualitative explanatory framework of consumer acculturation to explore the perceptions of Complementary Alternative Medicine (CAM) among recently medicated persons from three different ethnic and racial groups: whites, Latino minority (English-speakers), and Latino minority (Spanish-speakers) to understand the social mechanisms that contribute to differences in perceptions of and experiences with CAM use. Findings suggest that there is a continuum of receptivity to CAM use based on levels of acculturation. Latinos speaking primarily English mirrored patterns of CAM use among non-Hispanic whites which showed that CAM is complementary rather than a substitute for conventional care. For Spanish-speaking Latinos, CAM was more about expressions of a culture rooted in ethnicity and acculturation. For Spanish-speaking Latinos, CAM is about identity and part of a culture-making process.
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消费者对文化适应和补充/替代药物的态度:英语使用者、有色人种英语使用者和有色人种西班牙语使用者之间的差异
本研究实施了消费者文化适应的定性解释框架,以探索来自三个不同种族和种族群体:白人,拉丁裔少数群体(讲英语的)和拉丁裔少数群体(讲西班牙语的)最近接受治疗的人对补充替代医学(CAM)的看法,以了解导致对CAM使用的看法和经验差异的社会机制。研究结果表明,在文化适应水平的基础上,对CAM使用的接受程度是连续的。主要讲英语的拉美裔人反映了非西班牙裔白人使用辅助医疗的模式,这表明辅助医疗是对传统医疗的补充,而不是替代。对于说西班牙语的拉丁美洲人来说,CAM更多的是一种根植于种族和文化适应的文化表达。对于说西班牙语的拉丁美洲人来说,CAM是关于身份和文化形成过程的一部分。
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来源期刊
Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences
Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: The Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences publishes empirical articles, multiple case study reports, critical reviews of literature, conceptual articles, reports of new instruments, and scholarly notes of theoretical or methodological interest to Hispanic populations. The multidisciplinary focus of the HJBS includes the fields of anthropology, economics, education, linguistics, political science, psychology, psychiatry, public health, and sociology.
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