Abstract

Among Asian Americans, Filipino Americans (FAs)-who constitute the fourth largest US immigrant group and who fill in health care workforce shortages-experience high prevalence but low control rates of high blood pressure (HBP). Research reveals that patients' illness perceptions, their common-sense model (CSM) of the illness, influence treatment behaviors, and management outcomes. However, scarce information exists about FAs' perceptions about HBP. To address this gap, we conducted a cross-sectional study to (a) identify the illness perceptions of hypertensive FAs, (b) classify these perceptions into clusters, and (c) determine the association between illness perceptions and BP control. The responses of 248 FAs with HBP to the Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire were analyzed using JMP Pro version 17 to discover their CSMs or illness perceptions. We used iterative K means cluster analysis to classify variations in CSMs and analysis of means chart to determine the association of illness perceptions and BP control. Hypertensive FAs expressed threatening (negative) views of HBP through their emotional perceptions of the illness and its chronic time line, whereas their positive views centered on their cognitive beliefs about understanding HBP and its controllability. Based on the biomedical model of HBP, the overall illness perceptions or CSMs encompassed three clusters. Generally, threatening illness perceptions were associated with stage 2 HBP. The findings underscore the need for nurse practitioners to elicit, listen, discern, and understand the illness perceptions or CSMs of hypertensive FAs to improve BP treatment and control with scientifically and culturally tailored interventions.

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