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Volume 4: No. 3, July 2007
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
American Indian and Hispanic Populations Have Cultural
Values and Issues Similar to Those of Appalachian Populations
Suggested citation for this article: Marshall
CA. American Indian and Hispanic populations have cultural values and issues
similar to those of Appalachian populations [letter to the editor]. Prev Chronic Dis [serial online] 2007 Jul [date cited]. Available from:
http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2007/
jul/07_0001.htm.
To the Editor:
I want to thank you and the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention for disseminating such important work regarding my home region
of Appalachia (October 2006 issue of Preventing Chronic Disease).
It is based on the strength and support of my own southern Appalachian culture that I have been
able to appreciate and support culturally focused interventions among the American Indian and Hispanic populations with whom I have worked
during the past 25 years.
It is important to think of making linkages among peoples
and regions to improve both science and interventions for low-income and underserved people facing cancer. For instance, between such seemingly different areas as southern Arizona and southern Appalachia there are similar values in terms of a focus on family, religion, and home, and there are similar problems
among people with low socioeconomic status (SES) (e.g., lack of access to health care, low educational attainment). All of these aspects influence cancer intervention. Focusing on cancer in the Appalachian region, Behringer and Friedell (1) advised:
Focus group and survey participants reported that they gain most of their information about cancer from family, neighbors, and friends rather than from health professionals. Unfortunately, the information they receive often includes misperceptions of and dated knowledge about cancer treatments. The goal in Appalachia is to improve public cancer education while acknowledging
and effectively using prevailing patterns of communication.
These same findings would not be surprising in research conducted with American Indian or Hispanic populations.
The Appalachian culture is, by definition it seems, linked to low SES and to poverty (2,3).
In their article “Rehabilitation Counseling in Appalachian America,” Bauer and Growick
(4) noted, “In Appalachian America, income rates are lower, the unemployment is
higher, poverty is rampant. ... [and] social
and health services are scarce and scattered.” These authors
also suggested that a counselor should expect that a family member might attend a
counseling session along with the individual who has a chronic illness or
disability, commenting, “It is very important to Appalachian Americans to
involve the entire family in the decision-making process; intergenerational
support is an integral part of the fabric of life in Appalachia.”
Low SES, too often synonymous with life in Appalachia, figures largely in cancer,
in poor health in general (3,5,6), and in overall life expectancy (7). “Poor Americans, irrespective of race, have a 10% to 15% decreased rate of survival from cancer compared to the general population” (8). A study by Leybas-Amedia
et al (9) noted that access to
health care services and, in particular, cancer screening is more likely an issue of SES rather than culture.
Cancer, for individuals and families who are both poor and from underserved populations, can be an intimidating illness in terms of screening and
a cost-prohibitive illness in terms of treatment. What better way to address cancer-related health disparities, and health disparities in general, than documenting
and disseminating information and acting upon our common concerns and shared values.
Catherine A. Marshall, PhD
Research Professor
Department of Educational Psychology
Northern Arizona University
Flagstaff, Ariz
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References
- Behringer B, Friedell GH.
Appalachia: where place
matters in health. Prev Chronic Dis [serial online] 2006 Oct
[2006 Oct 10].
- Obermiller PJ, Maloney ME. Appalachia: social context past and present. 4th
ed. Dubuque (IA): Kendall/Hunt Publishing
Co; 2002.
- Wilcox LS.
Kitchen girl. Prev Chronic Dis [serial online] 2006 Oct
[2006 Oct 10].
- Bauer WM, Growick B. Rehabilitation counseling in Appalachian America. J Rehabil 2003;69(3):18-24.
- Couto RA, Simpson NK, Harris G. Sowing seeds in the mountains:
community-based coalitions for cancer prevention and control. Washington
(DC): National Cancer Institute, Division of Cancer Prevention and Control,
Cancer Control Sciences Program, The Appalachia Leadership Initiative on
Cancer; 1994.
- Poverty trumps race to explain poor prostate cancer
outcomes. Oncology 2006;20(4);[cited 2006 Oct 9]. Available
from:
http://www.cancernetwork.com/article/showArticle.jhtml?articleId=185301345 *
- Murray CJ, Kulkarni SC, Michaud C, Tomijima N, Bulzacchelli MT,
Iandiorio TJ, et al.
Eight
Americas: investigating mortality disparities across races, counties, and race-counties
in the United States. PLoS Med 2006;3(9):e260.
- Research aimed at poor and underserved populations: American Cancer Society announces new funding emphasis. Atlanta (GA): American Cancer Society;
1999.
- Leybas-Amedia V, Nuno T, Garcia F.
Effect of acculturation and income on Hispanic women’s health. J Health Care Poor Underserved 2005;16(4
Suppl A):128-41.
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*URLs for nonfederal organizations are provided solely as a
service to our users. URLs do not constitute an endorsement of any organization
by CDC or the federal government, and none should be inferred. CDC is
not responsible for the content of Web pages found at these URLs.
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