CFPHD
 
Highlights

CFPHD Events

Health Disparities and Their True Consequences
October 14, 2010


New!

Conference Multimedia

View conference images, sessions on video, and member videos!

CFPHD News

Josephine Mercado, J.D., receives The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation 2010 Community Health Leaders Award

Marie-Jose Francois, MD, MPH, CHES, receives the National Association of Community Health Centers, Inc. 2010 Lifetime Achievement Migrant Health Award

 

 

 
CFPHD e-Newsletter
Members Only

 

Welcome to the Central Florida Partnership on Health Disparities (CFPHD) Web site. The CFPHD is a group of community partners working together to reduce health disparities in Orange, Osceola, Seminole, and Brevard counties. The CFPHD's goal is to improve the health of racial and ethnic groups in our community and to help close the health disparity gap in our region.

Why a Partnership? Modern medical knowledge and technology have greatly improved our nation's overall health. However, not all Americans have benefited equally. Racial and ethnic groups are not as healthy and continue to experience persistent and escalating health disparities. These individuals face a number of barriers to getting medical care and staying healthy.

Our mission is to reduce health disparities in Central Florida through collaborative endeavors.

Our vision is 100% access, zero disparities.

What's Killing You?

Health risks and leading causes of death for your racial and ethnic
background:

HISPANIC LATINO

ASIAN AMERICANS

AFRICAN AMERICANS

AMERICAN
INDIANS/ ALASKANS

Health Information

Health Care Reform

Healthy Living

Health Data Sources

Fatalistic Attitudes May Keep Hispanic Women From Cancer Tests

Notion that health 'is in God's hands' could help explain low screening rates, study suggests

Originally Published in HealthDay News October 20, 2010

WEDNESDAY, Oct. 20 (HealthDay News) -- Fatalism, a belief that life's events are predetermined, may be one reason why Hispanic women have some of the lowest cancer screening rates in the United States, new research suggests.

Hispanic women are much more likely than white women to believe that cancer is not preventable, and that death is inevitable in those diagnosed with cancer, the researchers found.

Karla Espinosa de los Monteros and Linda Gallo from San Diego State University reviewed 11 studies that examined the association between Hispanic women's fatalism and their screening rates for cervical, breast and colorectal cancers.

The women in the studies were asked to what extent they agreed or disagreed with statements such as "cancer is like a death sentence," "cancer is God's punishment," "illness is a matter of chance," "there is little that I can do to prevent cancer," and "it does not do any good to try to change the future because the future is in the hands of God."

Seven of the 11 studies found a statistically significant link between fatalism and reduced use of cancer screening services. Further studies are needed to learn more about this association, the authors noted.

"Improving our understanding of the importance of fatalism in explaining underutilization of cancer screening services among Latinas may drive the development of more effective and culturally appropriate interventions to reduce ethnic disparities in cancer," the study authors concluded.

The study is scheduled for publication in the online edition of the International Journal of Behavioral Medicine.

r screening-- Robert Preidt

SOURCE: International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, news release, Oct. 18, 2010