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1.
This study examined the effectiveness of smoking cessation counseling by physicians-in-training (residents) with African-American patients. One hundred fifty-eight family and internal medicine residents at a large urban public general hospital participated in the study; two thirds of the residents underwent a 2-hour smoking cessation training program. Ninety-two of the trained physicians counseled from 1 to 18 patients. The majority of physicians were male, with 8% being current smokers. Over a 26-month period, 1086 patients were randomly assigned to intervention and control (usual care) groups. Mean patient age was 44 years, mean years smoking was 25, and mean number of cigarettes smoked per day was 14. There were no differences in biochemically validated smoking cessation rates between the intervention and control groups at 3 or 12 months postenrollment (2% versus 1.8% and 2.2% versus 2.8%, respectively). Losses to follow-up were high at both 3 and 12 months (38% and 40% respectively). Implications for future trials in minority populations are discussed. A brief physician-based smoking cessation message does not appear to be an effective strategy for use with African-American smokers in a large urban public general hospital.  相似文献   

2.
Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable mortality and morbidity in the United States. Patients advised to quit use of tobacco products by their health care providers are more likely to quit, yet it has been documented that patients are not receiving this advice. The aim of this study was to investigate whether or not current African American tobacco users were receiving provider-initiated advice to quit. A cross-sectional survey identified 245 self-reported African American tobacco users residing in Maryland. Study variables collected included sociodemographics, access to care, smoking status, and assessed if tobacco cessation counseling was ever provided. Among those surveyed, only 42% reported ever being counseled to quit tobacco use and, of those who had a recent clinical encounter (within the past year), only 20% reported being counseled. Multivariate logistic regression identified that having a regular source of health care, living in an urban setting, and being female increased chances of being advised to quit tobacco use. Overall, findings indicate that African Americans are not being screened or receiving cessation counseling as recommended by leading health agencies. Health care provider training to promote better integration of tobacco screening and tobacco cessation counseling during the patient encounter is needed.  相似文献   

3.
It has been projected that beyond 1995, African-American women will have the highest prevalence of tobacco smoking. This study, therefore, was undertaken to explore the beliefs, attitudes, and practices among African Americans regarding tobacco smoking so as to design more culturally appropriate smoking cessation interventions. Focus group discussions were conducted with 42 African-American women (31 ever smokers and 11 never smoked) exploring in-depth: 1) knowledge of the health consequences of smoking, 2) attitudes about the acceptability of smoking and personal reasons for smoking, 3) smoking practices, and 4) opinions about the necessary components of smoking cessation programs. Compared with nonsmokers, current smokers have not yet personalized the distant threat of smoking due to the very powerful immediate benefit obtained from the nicotine present in tobacco--the decrease in anxiety, tension, and depression, ie, "stress reduction." There is also a perception of powerful barriers to smoking cessation, ie, no internal mechanisms for stress modulation. Smoking cessation intervention programs must have culturally proficient psychoeducational components to address the cognitive and behavioral dysfunction associated with smoking. For those smokers with evidence of difficulty modulating dysphoria or tension, they also must address the possible underlying biochemical dysregulation.  相似文献   

4.
Previous reports have indicated ethnic differences in both tobacco-related morbidity and treatment outcome for smoking cessation among adults. We assessed smoking-related characteristics in African-American and non-African American teenagers applying to a cessation trial. 115 teens (15.9 +/- 1.8 years, 68% females, 27% African-American) responded via telephone to media ads. Self-reported sociodemographic, medical and smoking-related data were obtained to determine pre-eligibility for a full intake screen prior to trial participation. Compared to non-African American, African American teen applicants were older (16.4 +/- 1.7 years versus 15.6 +/- 1.6; p = 0.015), had lower Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND) scores (5.3 +/- 2.3 versus 6.1 +/- 1.8; p = 0.018, ANOVA controlling for age) and smoked fewer cigarettes on the weekend (27 +/- 16 versus 38 +/- 17; p = 0.001). African American teens reported similar duration of smoking (3.3 +/- 1.4 versus 3.1 +/- 1.5 years) and time elapsed between first cigarette ever smoked and daily smoking (0.7 +/- 0.9 versus 0.6 +/- 0.7 years). African American and non-African American teens had similar motivation to quit scores and frequency of reported health problems (e.g., asthma, psychiatric conditions). These data suggest that cessation treatment programs designed for African American youth should include lower Fagerstrom-defined levels, and possibly other criteria for tobacco dependence. These observations also highlight the importance of ethnocultural issues in treatment research programs.  相似文献   

5.
Bellevue Hospital, the oldest public hospital in the United States and a lineal descendant of an infirmary for slaves, accepted its first African-American resident, Dr. Ubert Conrad Vincent, in 1918. This occurred at a time when many medical centers were not accepting African-American residents. At the end of WWII, one-third of the accredited medical schools still barred African Americans. However, Bellevue Hospital continued to train African-American residents. Between the 1920s and 1940s four African Americans matriculated at Bellevue Hospital. There were six in the 1950s, four in the 1960s, and 25 in the 1970s. By the 1980s, 40 African Americans matriculated, and between 1990 and 1995, 61 matriculated. Despite its historic first, Bellevue lagged slightly behind the national average. While the number of African-American residents occupying U.S. residency slots increased from 2.8% in 1978 to 6.5% in 1996, African Americans comprised 3.6% of residency slots at Bellevue between 1985-1995. Currently, only 7% of practicing physicians and 5% in faculty positions are latino, African-American, and Native American. Increasing the number of under-represented minority (URM) physicians is important to the United States, as URM physicians are more likely to serve the poor and uninsured, therefore improving the overall healthcare of the underprivileged. A study by the Association of American Medical Colleges indicated that minority medical school graduates were five times more likely to report that they planned to serve minority populations than other graduates. In their position paper, the American College of Physicians expressed the belief that increasing the number of URM physicians will help reduce healthcare disparities that can hurt minority populations and lead to poor health outcomes. The Supreme Court acknowledged the importance of racial diversity by upholding the University of Michigan affirmative action admissions policy in its June 2003 ruling. URM physicians are needed not only to serve minority populations but also to serve as mentors and role models for prospective and current students. The first African-American resident to graduate from the Bellevue Residency Program did indeed treat the underserved, as Dr. Vincent founded the Vincent Sanatorium, dedicated to treating African-American patients, and training African-American nurses and doctors. Over the course of the 20th century, Bellevue Hospital has trained increasing numbers of African-American physicians. It is hoped that, like their predecessor, Dr. Vincent, they will provide care to underserved communities and to the community as a whole, as well as serve as role models for generations to come.  相似文献   

6.
Colorectal cancer causes significant morbidity and mortality in the United States. African Americans are disproportionately affected by this malignancy. There is evidence to suggest that resident physicians inconsistently screen for colorectal cancer in African Americans, perhaps because of a deficiency in knowledge and limited resources. This study evaluated internal medicine resident physicians' colorectal screening practices in African Americans prior to and following a focused educational intervention. A medical record review of internal medicine resident physicians' adherence to colorectal cancer screening recommendations was conducted. Physicians' performance of rectal exams, fecal occult blood testing, flexible sigmoidoscopy and colonoscopy was evaluated for six months prior to and six months following an educational intervention that focused upon issues related to racial disparities in colorectal cancer. Statistical significance was assessed using Fischer's exact test. There were 116 patients included in the preintervention assessment and 132 patients included in the postintervention assessment. There was no statistical significance in the rate at which rectal exams (p=0.6605) and fecal occult blood testing (p=0.7748) were performed prior to and following the educational initiative. However, there was a statistically significant difference in the rate at which endoscopic assessments (p<0.0001) were performed. Educational interventions that are focused upon racial disparity in colorectal cancer may improve resident physicians' performance of endoscopic exams in African Americans. Continued effort to enhance resident physicians' colorectal cancer screening practices in African Americans is important.  相似文献   

7.
The aim of the study is to determine attitudes and self-reported practices performance for smoking cessation counseling of the physicians working at a university hospital in Malatya, Turkey. All physicians who were providing health care to adult patients in 19 outpatient clinics at the hospital were administered a self-reported questionnaire. Of the physicians, 26.5% reported that they were always asking about their patients' smoking history and 22.6% were always advising their smoker patients to quit. Men non-smoker physicians more often practiced counseling than men smoker physicians. Negative attitudes of physicians about smoking cessation counseling negatively effected their practices. Negative attitudes were significantly higher among men smoker physicians than non-smokers but attitudes did not differ among female smoker and non-smoker physicians. The findings showed that smoking cessation counseling was rarely practiced by physicians and physicians' practices differed by their smoking behavior, departments and attitudes towards smoking cessation.  相似文献   

8.
Data for 473 African-American and white smokers showed that whites were more likely than African Americans to use formal cessation programs to quit smoking, to report that their doctor told them to stop smoking, and to use nicotine replacement therapy. While physicians advised a high proportion of smokers of each race group to quit smoking and were quite aggressive in prescribing nicotine replacement therapy, they were deficient in providing necessary behavioral support to their patients.  相似文献   

9.
While African American physicians can play a key role in encouraging black patients who smoke to quit, little is known about the views and activities of these physicians with respect to antitobacco programming. In the process of developing a protocol for encouraging physicians'' smoking cessation intervention, 96 African-American physicians completed a survey indicating their knowledge, attitudes, and practices relating to stop smoking counseling. Few physicians reported patient help-seeking behavior and 47.9% cited lack of patient motivation as a key barrier to intervention. Only 46.8% believed that it is possible to accomplish a lot of cessation help in a few minutes time, and 34.4% believed that setting up and maintaining an office protocol would require a great deal of effort. Explaining health risks (71.9%) and enrolling patients in programs (66.6%) were perceived as keys to patient cessation; fewer than half of the physicians surveyed discuss specific strategies for quitting with their patients. Physicians indicated a willingness to offer more counseling in the future and were open to a range of strategies for learning more about effective approaches. Our findings support the need for dissemination of such information, particularly among specialists, to support antitobacco efforts among African-American physicians.  相似文献   

10.
African-American physicians and dentists in metropolitan Atlanta were surveyed to assess smoking cessation practices and perceptions. Questionnaires were mailed to 373 physicians and 90 dentists. A total of 154 questionnaires were returned, for an overall response rate of 33.3%. More physicians than dentists considered smoking a "very serious" threat to patients'' health, and physicians were more likely to document smoking status in charts and to counsel smokers to quit. Physicians also were approached more frequently by patients seeking cessation advice. Both types of practitioners considered the nicotine patch, formal cessation programs, and behavior modification/psychotherapy to be among the most effective cessation methods, and nicotine gum and acupuncture to be among the least effective. These results indicate African-American physicians are much more involved than dentists in promoting smoking cessation among patients. Advice of health professionals generally is viewed as a powerful influence for African-American patients. Further work is needed to utilize fully the power of health care providers, especially dentists, in the fight against tobacco-related morbidity and mortality.  相似文献   

11.
Though few question the importance of incorporating professionalism and humanism in the training of physicians, traditional residency programs have given little direct attention to the processes by which professional and humanistic values, attitudes, and behaviors are cultivated. The authors discuss the underlying philosophy of their primary care internal medicine residency program, in which the development of professionalism and humanism is an explicit educational goal. They also describe the specific components of the program designed to create a learner-centered environment that supports the acquisition of professional values; these components include a communication-skills training program, challenging-case conferences, home visits with patients, a resident support group, and a mentoring program. The successful ten-year history of the program shows how a residency program can enable its trainees to develop not only the requisite excellent diagnostic and technical tools and skills but also the humane and professional attributes of the fully competent physician.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND: Despite smoking fewer cigarettes per day, African Americans have lower cessation rates and experience disproportionately higher rates of smoking-related health consequences. Because of their high preference for menthol cigarettes, it has been suggested that smoking menthol cigarettes may contribute to the excess smoking-related morbidity experienced by African Americans. Smoking menthol cigarettes could increase health risks from smoking if smokers of menthol cigarettes have lower cessation rates and thereby have longer duration of smoking compared to smokers of nonmentholated cigarettes. Few studies have examined associations between smoking of mentholated cigarettes and smoking cessation among African Americans. This study examined the smoking patterns of menthol cigarette smokers and their smoking cessation experiences. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey of 480 African-American smokers at an inner-city health center. Survey examined sociodemographics, smoking characteristics, and smoking cessation experiences of participants. Menthol smokers (n = 407) were compared to nonmenthol smokers (n = 73) in these characteristics. RESULTS: Menthol smokers were younger and more likely to smoke cigarettes with longer rod length, with filters, and those high in nicotine and tar. Although both groups did not differ by number of past quit attempts, time since most recent quit attempt was shorter for menthol smokers. The durations of most recent and longest-ever quit attempts were nonsignificantly shorter for menthol, compared to nonmenthol smokers. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that African-American menthol smokers are less successful with smoking cessation. Prospective studies are needed to confirm these findings and examine mechanisms underlying such differences.  相似文献   

13.
PURPOSE: African Americans comprise 13% of Americans but only 4% of U.S. physicians. The reasons for this disparity are unclear. The purpose of this study was to identify African-American high-school student perspectives on barriers to African Americans pursuing careers in medicine. METHOD: Focus group interviews (consisting of 15 questions) were conducted of African-American high-school juniors attending a Milwaukee public high school in which 89% of students are African Americans. The two focus groups were conducted in 2006, transcribed and analyzed using grounded theory. RESULTS: The 12 students interviewed in two focus groups had a mean age of 17 years; 41% of students' parents were high-school graduates. Major barriers to becoming a physician cited by students included financial constraints, lack of knowledge about medicine, little/no encouragement at home or in school, negative peer views on excelling academically, lack of African-American role models in the community and on TV, racism in medicine, and easier and more appealing alternatives for making money. Students stated that increasing the number of African-American physicians would enhance patient-physician communication and relationships, and more African Americans would become physicians if there were greater exposure to medicine in schools, more guidance at a younger age and more role models. CONCLUSION: Financial constraints, insufficient exposure to medicine as a career, little encouragement at home and in schools, lack of role models, and negative peer pressure may contribute to racial disparities in the physician workforce for African Americans. Exposure at a young age to role models and to medicine as a profession might increase the number of African American physicians.  相似文献   

14.
OBJECTIVE: To further our understanding of the workplace smoking policies and smoking cessation practices of physicians in Nigeria. DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey distributed to 619 physicians practicing in two teaching hospitals in southwestern Nigeria. PARTICIPANTS: Three-hundred-seventy-three physicians who returned completed surveys. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Physician's self-reported workplace smoking policies, attitudes toward smoking cessation, and use of recommended smoking cessation guidelines/policies. RESULTS: Physicians rated quitting as "extremely important." The majority assessed their patients smoking status over the past three months (81%) and thought counseling smokers would help them quit (95%). However, < 1% prescribed pharmacotherapy for smoking cessation in the last three months. Significant differences were found in the workplace smoking policies of the two teaching hospitals (p < 0.001). Differences were also found in the attitudes and smoking cessation practices of physicians in Hospital A and Hospital B. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians are aware of smoking and the importance of quitting but few have guidelines/policies to assist their patients with quitting. Workplace smoking policies appear to impact the smoking cessation attitudes and practices of physicians in Nigeria. Encouraging the adoption of workplace smoking restrictions, as well as training physicians to use recommended smoking cessation interventions, is critical to addressing the tobacco epidemic in Nigeria.  相似文献   

15.
There are significant health disparities between African Americans and whites in the United States. While colon cancer screening aids in decreasing the morbidity and mortality from colon cancer in African Americans, other health risks may also be identified during gastroenterology consultations. This study evaluated whether there is a disparity in the prevalence of hypertension and hypertension management in African Americans compared to whites who are referred for colon cancer screening consultations. The medical records of 258 patients (90 African Americans and 168 whites) were reviewed. Seventy-two of 90 (80%) African-American patients and 42 of 168 (25%) white patients had hypertension. There was a statistically significant difference (p < 0.005) in the rate of hypertension in African Americans compared to whites. Medications were prescribed by their referring physicians for 42 (58%) of the hypertensive African Americans, with 36 noted to have inadequately controlled blood pressure. Thirty (42%) of the hypertensive African-American patients were never prescribed blood pressure medications. Medications were prescribed by their referring physician for 36 (86%) of the hypertensive white patients, with six noted to have inadequately controlled blood pressure. Six (14%) of the hypertensive white patients were never prescribed blood pressure medications. There was a statistically significant difference in the rate of blood pressure control (p = 0.007) between African-American and white patients who were referred for colon cancer screening. Increased efforts are necessary to identify critical health concerns of all patients and to decrease health disparities between African Americans and whites in the United States.  相似文献   

16.
BackgroundAfrican American smokers suffer disproportionately from tobacco-related disease caused, in part, by lower rates of smoking cessation. We examined whether smoke-free home policies and delay discounting were differentially associated with cigarettes smoked per day (CPD) and nicotine dependence (ND) among African Americans and Whites.MethodsSecondary data analysis was conducted using data from 65 African American (n = 40) and White (n = 25) smokers who completed measures of CPD, ND, tobacco craving, stress, depression, home smoking policy, and delay discounting.ResultsA significant interaction was found between race and home smoking policy on CPD (B = −11.21, p = 0.002) and ND (B = −3.42, p = 0.004). Smoke-free policies in the home were associated with fewer CPD and lower ND levels among Whites, but not among African Americans. Whites who allowed smoking in their homes had significantly greater mean CPD and higher mean ND than their counterparts who did not allow smoking in the home. Among African American smokers, there were no differences in CPD and ND among those who allowed smoking in their home versus those who did not.ConclusionsThe findings extend the scientific literature by suggesting that a malleable environmental factor (home smoking policy) commonly associated with cessation among Whites does not have the same influence on cessation among African American.  相似文献   

17.
BACKGROUND: There is a marked racial difference in the use of knee and hip replacement for osteoarthritis (OA). The reasons for this disparity remain unclear. We examined how African-American and white patients with symptomatic OA of the knee and/or hip compare with respect to their perceptions of care for knee and hip OA. METHODS: Survey of 596 male patients with OA of the knee and/or hip in primary care clinics at Cleveland VAMC. RESULTS: African-American (44%) and white (56%) study participants were comparable with respect to age and clinical factors. African Americans were more likely to have VA insurance only [OR=1.93 (1.13-3.28)]. African Americans were less likely to report difficulty getting medical care when needed [OR=0.54 (0.34-0.88)]. Differences in the two groups regarding satisfaction with and confidence in the primary physician were not significant. The proportions of participants who received specialty care referrals were similar. CONCLUSION: African-American patients reported having only VA insurance more often than white patients. Other aspects of perceived system and provider-based factors were similar between groups.  相似文献   

18.
This study examines whether race is a significant determinant of the diagnoses of acute myocardial infarction or angina pectoris in patients with symptoms suggestive of acute cardiac ischemia. The study population was comprised of 3401 (34%) African-American and 6600 (66%) white patients who presented to emergency departments with symptoms suggestive of acute cardiac ischemia. The main outcome measure was a diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction or angina pectoris. African Americans were younger, predominantly female, and more often had hypertension, diabetes mellitus, or smoked. The diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction was confirmed in 6% of African-American and 12% of white men, and in 4% of African-American and 8% of white women. After adjusting for age, gender, medical history, signs and symptoms, and hospital, African Americans were half as likely to develop acute myocardial infarction and were 60% as likely to have acute cardiac ischemia. Despite having less acute cardiac ischemia, African Americans in this study had high risk levels for coronary artery disease.  相似文献   

19.
CONTEXT: The reasons for African-American men to seek care for lower urinary care symptoms has not been determined due to sparse population-based data. OBJECTIVE: Our study examines the solicitation and receipt of medical care for urinary symptoms among racially oversampled elderly urban and rural cohort of African Americans and whites. DESIGN: Longitudinal analyses were conducted on five North Carolina counties through the Piedmont Health Survey of the Elderly Established Populations for the Epidemiological Study of the Elderly. In 1994, the analytic cohort included 482 African Americans and 407 whites; by 1998, 249 and 222, respectively. RESULTS: In 1994, 49.4% of African Americans presented with lower urinary tract symptoms compared to 56.8% of whites. By 1998, these percentages increased to 60.6% and 70.3%, respectively. African Americans reported more interference with activities of daily living than whites. African Americans were less likely than whites to have regular digital rectal exams (DRE) and were more likely to have never received a DRE at all. Additionally, elders with less educational attainment, those who smoked, those who delayed care quite often and those who used less-experienced physicians were less likely to receive regular DREs. CONCLUSION: Poor health behavior has the greatest impact on healthcare seeking for lower urinary tract symptoms. These health behavior risk factors are systemic of a lack of health education. Increases in health education among African Americans regarding lower urinary tract symptoms may close the racial disparity in healthcare-seeking behaviors.  相似文献   

20.
How internal medicine residents resolve conflicts with attending physicians   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Forty-three of 49 residents in an internal medicine residency answered questionnaires in 1988 about resolving conflicts with attending physicians concerning patient care, using ten case scenarios. The residents indicated their likelihoods of using various methods of addressing the conflicts via Likert-type scales. The residents were most likely to negotiate with the attending physician and least likely to ignore the attending physician or withdraw from the case for all scenarios, though the type of procedure affected the decision. The residents planning careers in general medicine or nonmedical specialties were more likely to agree with the attending physician than were the residents planning medicine subspecialty careers (p less than .005); the graduates from osteopathic schools were more likely to withdraw from the case than were the residents from allopathic schools (p = .05). Conflicts between the residents and attending physicians were resolved by negotiation and interaction with the attending physicians, but the nature of the procedure, medical school attended, and future career plans affected the means of resolving the dilemma chosen by the individual resident.  相似文献   

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