Cancer Nursing
Volume 31, Issue 4, 2008, Pages E1-E10

The sociocultural context of breast cancer screening among korean immigrant women (Article)

Suh E.E.
  • a Seoul National University, College of Nursing, Seoul, South Korea, Seoul National University, College of Nursing, 28 Yeongun-dong, Jongrogu, Seoul 110-799, South Korea

Abstract

Korean immigrant women, who compose 1 of 6 major subpopulations in Asian Americans in the United States, are reported to have far lower rates of breast cancer screening than do women in general. Despite the sporadically reported cognitive, affective, and environmental constraints to the screening practices, to date, no research has been conducted to investigate the sociocultural contexts within which women in this population seek help for breast health. The purpose of this study is to explore and interpret the sociocultural processes of breast cancer screening among Korean immigrant women using the grounded theory method. Twenty Korean immigrant women, aged between 20 and 81 years, participated in a set of 2 consecutive qualitative interviews conducted in the Korean language. The qualitative data were transcribed and analyzed using the constant comparison technique. "Balancing relationships within a discordant world" is the core concept of the process of breast cancer screening among Korean immigrant women. There are sociocultural discords in perceptions of breast cancer and screening procedures between Asian ways of thinking and Western biomedical premises. The elicited situation-specific theory sheds light on what Western healthcare professionals have missed and what they should consider in caring for culturally diverse populations. Copyright © 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Author Keywords

qualitative research Cultural diversity Breast cancer Korean Americans Ethnicity Mass screening

Index Keywords

perception immigrant breast cancer Asian mass screening health care personnel human middle aged controlled study priority journal comparative study Aged cancer screening ethnology interview United States Humans Breast Neoplasms Asian Americans Emigrants and Immigrants Asian American female Aged, 80 and over breast tumor qualitative analysis questionnaire cultural factor Article thinking Questionnaires adult grounded theory human experiment migration Cultural Characteristics Korea

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-56049114902&doi=10.1097%2f01.NCC.0000305742.56829.fc&partnerID=40&md5=29086b340b1bcab4a7fd853ebcb4a989

DOI: 10.1097/01.NCC.0000305742.56829.fc
ISSN: 0162220X
Cited by: 25
Original Language: English