Intergenerational Influence of African American, Caribbean and Hispanic/Latino Adults Regarding Decision to Participate in Health-Related Research.
Autor: | Gaillard, Trudy, Shambley-Ebron, Donna Z., Vaccaro, Joan A., Neff, Donna F., Padovano, Cynthia Morton, Swagger, Phildra, Vieira, Edgar, Webb, Fern |
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Předmět: |
PATIENT selection
AFRICAN Americans RESEARCH funding HUMAN research subjects HISPANIC Americans INTERVIEWING DECISION making in clinical medicine TELEMEDICINE THEMATIC analysis MEDICAL research CARIBBEAN people RESEARCH methodology CONCEPTUAL structures DATA analysis software INTERGENERATIONAL relations PATIENT participation |
Zdroj: | Research on Aging; Aug/Sep2024, Vol. 46 Issue 7/8, p414-425, 12p |
Abstrakt: | Introduction: Identifying effective strategies to enroll African American, Caribbean, and Hispanic/Latino adults ≥65 years of age in health research is a public health priority. This study aimed to explore intergenerational influence (IGI) among these populations living throughout Florida. Methods: African American, Caribbean, and Hispanic/Latino adults ≥65 years of age and a trusted family member/friend between 25–64 years participated in virtual listening sessions (LS). Culturally matched facilitators used a semi-structured guide to lead LS that was recorded, transcribed, and uploaded into NVivo©. The constant comparative method was used for analysis. Results: 363 African American, Caribbean, and Hispanic/Latino participated in LS. Five (5) themes relate to IGI emerged: (1) parent-child relationships; (2) family caregiving/parental illness experiences; (3) historical research maltreatment; (4) transfer of cultural knowledge; and (5) future generations. Discussion: Our findings support that IGI can be leveraged to increase the participation of African American, Caribbean, and Hispanic/Latino older adults in health research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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