Abstract

Puerto Ricans have higher lifetime and current asthma prevalence than other racial and ethnic groups in the United States. A great many Hispanics use ethnomedical therapies for asthma. This study elicited participant knowledge of ethnomedical therapies, developed a typology of the therapies, and considered whether some types are used or deemed efficacious based, in part, on information source. Eligible participants were randomly selected from the medical records of an inner-city primary care clinic serving a predominantly Hispanic community in Buffalo, New York. Thirty adult Puerto Ricans who had asthma or were care-givers of children with asthma were interviewed in person using a semistructured instrument. Qualitative data analysis followed a content-driven immersion-crystallization approach. Outcome measures were ethnomedical treatments for asthma known to participants, whether these treatments were used or perceived effective, and the participant's information source about the treatment. Participants identified 75 ethnomedical treatments for asthma. Behavioral strategies were significantly more likely to be used or perceived effective compared with ingested and topical remedies (P <.001). Among information sources for ingested and topical remedies, those recommended by community members were significantly less likely to be used or perceived effective (P <.001) compared with other sources. This sample of Puerto Ricans with a regular source of medical care was significantly more likely to use or perceive as effective behavioral strategies compared with ingested and topical remedies. Allopathic clinicians should ask Puerto Rican patients about their use of ethnomedical therapies for asthma to better understand their health beliefs and to integrate ethnomedical therapies with allopathic medicine.

Highlights

  • Among information sources for ingested and topical remedies, those recommended by community members were significantly less likely to be used or perceived effective (P

  • Hispanics have worse access to care, and the health care they receive is of poorer quality than that received by non-Hispanic whites.[1]

  • Lifetime and current asthma prevalence are higher in Puerto Rico than any other state or territory of the United States.[4,5,6]

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Summary

Introduction

Hispanics have worse access to care, and the health care they receive is of poorer quality than that received by non-Hispanic whites.[1] Compared with other Hispanic subgroups (eg, MexicanAmericans, Cubans), Puerto Ricans have poorer self-assessed health status, more activity limitations, and more medical conditions.[2,3] This disparity exists despite their eligibility for public health care programs as US citizens. One study found Puerto Ricans have higher current asthma prevalence than Dominicans and other Hispanic subgroups, even when they have the same living environment and a similar socioeconomic status.[18] The reasons for this disparity are not known.

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