Psychosocial correlates of medical mistrust among African American men.

Wizdom Powell Hammond
Author Information
  1. Wizdom Powell Hammond: Department of Health Behavior Health Education, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Gillings School of Global Public Health, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA. wizdom.powell@unc.edu

Abstract

The current study proposed and tested a conceptual model of medical mistrust in a sample of African American men (N = 216) recruited primarily from barbershops in the Midwest and Southeast regions of the United States. Potential psychosocial correlates were grouped into background factors, masculine role identity/socialization factors, recent healthcare experiences, recent socioenvironmental experiences (e.g., discrimination), and healthcare system outcome expectations (e.g., perceived racism in healthcare). Direct and mediated relationships were assessed. Results from the hierarchical regression analyses suggest that perceived racism in healthcare was the most powerful correlate of medical mistrust even after controlling for other factors. Direct effects were found for age, masculine role identity, recent patient-physician interaction quality, and discrimination experiences. Also, perceived racism in healthcare mediated the relationship between discrimination experiences and medical mistrust. These findings suggest that African American men's mistrust of healthcare organizations is related to personal characteristics, previous negative social/healthcare experiences, and expectations of disparate treatment on the basis of race. These findings also imply that aspects of masculine role identity shape the tone of patient-physician interactions in ways that impede trust building processes.

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Grants

  1. L60 MD002605/NIMHD NIH HHS
  2. L60 MD002605-01/NIMHD NIH HHS
  3. 3U01CA114629-04S2/NCI NIH HHS
  4. 1L60MD002605-01/NIMHD NIH HHS
  5. U01 CA114629/NCI NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Black or African American
Aged
Georgia
Humans
Male
Michigan
Middle Aged
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
Prejudice
Surveys and Questionnaires
Trust
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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