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The effects of the cultural context of health care on treatment of and response to chronic pain and illness

Maryann S. Bates, Lesley Rankin-Hill and Melba Sanchez-Ayendez

Social Science & Medicine, 1997, vol. 45, issue 9, 1433-1447

Abstract: Qualitative data from two studies in Puerto Rico and New England are used to show how cultural values, standards and beliefs in different health care contexts affect (1) health care professionals' responses to patients' problems, (2) the relationships between providers and patients, and (3) the patients' responses to chronic pain and illness. Influencing elements in the care setting include the world view of the relationship of mind and body in illness processes, the dominant values and standards regarding pain and illness behaviors and the degree of cooperation between the providers and other agencies the patient depends on for compensation, rehabilitation and health insurance. In the New England study, the biomedical world view of mind-body dualism was shared by providers and most patients, but this shared belief often contributed to substantial patient stress and alienation. In contrast, in the Puerto Rican study providers and patients often shared a view of mind-body integration in illness and valued treatments which addressed chronic pain as a biopsychosocial experience. In this setting, shared views and values contributed to more supportive patient-provider relationships, and patients thus experienced less treatment-related stress.

Keywords: chronic; pain; cultural; context; ethnomedical; systems; variation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1997
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