受严重影响的移民社区对乙型肝炎和肝癌的现有认识、误解和看法

IF 3.5 4区 医学 Q2 IMMUNOLOGY Journal of Virus Eradication Pub Date : 2024-06-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jve.2024.100379
Thomas Chen , Fiona Borondy-Jenkins , Beatrice Zovich , Suzanne J. Block , Kate Moraras , Alice Chan , Chari Cohen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景在美国,来自东南亚、太平洋岛屿、撒哈拉以南非洲和加勒比海地区的移民群体承受着最沉重的慢性乙型肝炎和原发性肝癌负担。为了在这些群体中推广保护性健康行为,最终减轻疾病负担、减少耻辱感并消除健康差异,有必要开展教育活动以增加对这些疾病及其关联的了解。本项目旨在让受严重影响的社区内的群体参与进来,以确定目前在乙型肝炎和肝癌相关知识方面存在的差距,从而为未来的健康教育计划提供信息,这些计划旨在减少耻辱感,促进群体内和群体间的肝癌预防和早期检测行为。方法通过虚拟方式与来自密克罗尼西亚、中国、苗族、尼日利亚、加纳、越南、朝鲜、索马里、埃塞俄比亚、菲律宾、海地和西非法语社区的参与者进行了 15 次焦点小组讨论和两次关键信息提供者访谈。结果在亚洲、太平洋岛民、非洲和海地移民社区中,对乙型肝炎和肝癌以及这两种疾病之间联系的了解和认识存在很大差距。这种有限的知识和错误的信息,再加上耻辱感,阻碍了这些群体对乙型肝炎和肝癌诊断及预防保健服务的利用。研究结果可指导制定适合不同文化和语言的教育计划,重点关注乙型肝炎和肝癌之间的联系以及疫苗接种和常规筛查的必要性,并对不同社区的知识差距和误解做出回应。研究结果还为医疗服务提供者提供了宝贵的见解,帮助他们改善所服务的不同患者群体的知识差距。
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Existing knowledge, myths, and perceptions about hepatitis B and liver cancer within highly impacted immigrant communities

Background

Immigrant groups from Southeast Asia, the Pacific Islands, sub-Saharan Africa, and the Caribbean bear the heaviest burden of chronic hepatitis B and primary liver cancer in the United States. Educational campaigns to increase knowledge about these diseases and their connection are necessary to promote protective health behaviors within these communities, to ultimately reduce the burden of disease, lessen stigma, and eliminate health disparities.

Objectives

This project sought to engage groups within highly impacted communities to identify existing gaps in hepatitis B- and liver cancer-related knowledge, in order to inform future health education programming that will aim to reduce stigma and promote liver cancer prevention and early detection behaviors within and across groups.

Methods

Fifteen focus groups and two key informant interviews were conducted virtually with participants from Micronesian, Chinese, Hmong, Nigerian, Ghanaian, Vietnamese, Korean, Somali, Ethiopian, Filipino, Haitian, and Francophone West African communities. Qualitative data were analyzed using thematic coding.

Results

There are large gaps in knowledge and awareness of hepatitis B and liver cancer, and the link between these two diseases among Asian, Pacific Islander, African and Haitian immigrant communities. This limited knowledge and misinformation, exacerbated by stigma, hinder these groups’ utilization of hepatitis B and liver cancer diagnostic and preventative healthcare services.

Conclusion

To reduce hepatitis B and liver cancer health disparities within heavily burdened groups, health education needs to be community-informed, culturally sensitive, and actionable. Study results can guide the development of culturally and linguistically appropriate education programs that focus on the link between hepatitis B and liver cancer and the need for vaccination and routine screening, and that are responsive to the knowledge gaps and misperceptions of diverse communities. The results also provide valuable insights for healthcare providers to improve the knowledge gaps of the diverse patient populations that they serve.

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来源期刊
Journal of Virus Eradication
Journal of Virus Eradication Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
1.80%
发文量
28
审稿时长
39 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Virus Eradication aims to provide a specialist, open-access forum to publish work in the rapidly developing field of virus eradication. The Journal covers all human viruses, in the context of new therapeutic strategies, as well as societal eradication of viral infections with preventive interventions. The Journal is aimed at the international community involved in the prevention and management of viral infections. It provides an academic forum for the publication of original research into viral reservoirs, viral persistence and virus eradication and ultimately development of cures. The Journal not only publishes original research, but provides an opportunity for opinions, reviews, case studies and comments on the published literature. It focusses on evidence-based medicine as the major thrust in the successful management of viral infections.The Journal encompasses virological, immunological, epidemiological, modelling, pharmacological, pre-clinical and in vitro, as well as clinical, data including but not limited to drugs, immunotherapy and gene therapy. It is an important source of information on the development of vaccine programs and preventative measures aimed at virus eradication.
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