Curr
Hypertens Rep 1999 Dec;1(6):482-8
Hypertension in multicultural and minority populations: linking communication
to compliance.
Betancourt JR, Carrillo JE, Green AR.
The New York Presbyterian Hospital, The Weill Medical College of Cornell
University, Cornell Internal Medical Associates, 505 East 70th Street,
HT-4, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Cardiovascular disease disproportionately affects minority populations,
in part because of multiple sociocultural factors that directly affect
compliance with antihypertensive medication regimens. Compliance is a
complex health behavior determined by a variety of socioeconomic, individual,
familial, and cultural factors. In general, provider-patient communication
has been shown to be linked to patient satisfaction, compliance, and health
outcomes. In multicultural and minority populations, the issue of communication
may play an even larger role because of linguistic and contextual barriers
that preclude effective provider-patient communication. These factors
may further limit compliance. The ESFT Model for Communication and Compliance
is an individual, patient-based communication tool that allows for screening
for barriers to compliance and illustrates strategies for interventions
that might improve outcomes for all hypertensive patients.
PMID: 10981110 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]