The Social Context of Stress and Social Support among Immigrant Latinas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer

Social support plays a crucial role in both the physical and mental adjustment to the diagnosis of breast cancer and its treatment. However, the mediating effects of social support are embedded within the larger, social and cultural contexts in which support given and received. Due to language, cult...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Martinez Tyson, Dinorah
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/380
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1379&context=etd
id ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-1379
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-13792019-10-04T05:16:50Z The Social Context of Stress and Social Support among Immigrant Latinas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer Martinez Tyson, Dinorah Social support plays a crucial role in both the physical and mental adjustment to the diagnosis of breast cancer and its treatment. However, the mediating effects of social support are embedded within the larger, social and cultural contexts in which support given and received. Due to language, culture and economic issues, immigrants may find themselves without the social support and networks that had previously enabled them to cope with illness and disease. This research grounds our understanding of social support and breast cancer within that larger context that includes the social environment and the experience of health disparities. Ethnographic methods were used to explore the cultural domains of social support and to examine cultural and structural factors that influence this multifaceted construct. Participant observation, key informant interviews and 28 in-depth interviews with Latina immigrants diagnosed with breast cancer were conducted in Phase I. The qualitative data gathered in Phase 1 informed the development of the structured questionnaire that was administered in Phase II to 60 Latina immigrants in West Central Florida who had been diagnosed with breast cancer. Breast cancer not only affects individuals, it impacts their social relationships, finances, work, and social roles. The analysis provides a rich and in-depth understanding of social support and contextualizes the breast cancer experience of Latina immigrants. Results suggest that cultural expectations about gender roles shape what kinds of support and assistance is provided by men and women. Spirituality and prayer were identified as non verbal sources of support. Beliefs about not burdening the family with personal concerns and beliefs that family needs should come before one's own were negatively associated with social support. English proficiency and length of time in the United States were not associated with social support. Regardless of length of time in the US there appears to be strong ties with family in their native country. While family both in the US and in their native country were identified as sources of support, they were also identified as a source of stress. Recommendations for clinicians, practitioners and community-based organizations that provide supportive services and programs to Latinos are included. 2008-10-27T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/380 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1379&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Medical anthropology Hispanic health Women's health Immigration Cancer survivorship American Studies Arts and Humanities
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Medical anthropology
Hispanic health
Women's health
Immigration
Cancer survivorship
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
spellingShingle Medical anthropology
Hispanic health
Women's health
Immigration
Cancer survivorship
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
Martinez Tyson, Dinorah
The Social Context of Stress and Social Support among Immigrant Latinas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer
description Social support plays a crucial role in both the physical and mental adjustment to the diagnosis of breast cancer and its treatment. However, the mediating effects of social support are embedded within the larger, social and cultural contexts in which support given and received. Due to language, culture and economic issues, immigrants may find themselves without the social support and networks that had previously enabled them to cope with illness and disease. This research grounds our understanding of social support and breast cancer within that larger context that includes the social environment and the experience of health disparities. Ethnographic methods were used to explore the cultural domains of social support and to examine cultural and structural factors that influence this multifaceted construct. Participant observation, key informant interviews and 28 in-depth interviews with Latina immigrants diagnosed with breast cancer were conducted in Phase I. The qualitative data gathered in Phase 1 informed the development of the structured questionnaire that was administered in Phase II to 60 Latina immigrants in West Central Florida who had been diagnosed with breast cancer. Breast cancer not only affects individuals, it impacts their social relationships, finances, work, and social roles. The analysis provides a rich and in-depth understanding of social support and contextualizes the breast cancer experience of Latina immigrants. Results suggest that cultural expectations about gender roles shape what kinds of support and assistance is provided by men and women. Spirituality and prayer were identified as non verbal sources of support. Beliefs about not burdening the family with personal concerns and beliefs that family needs should come before one's own were negatively associated with social support. English proficiency and length of time in the United States were not associated with social support. Regardless of length of time in the US there appears to be strong ties with family in their native country. While family both in the US and in their native country were identified as sources of support, they were also identified as a source of stress. Recommendations for clinicians, practitioners and community-based organizations that provide supportive services and programs to Latinos are included.
author Martinez Tyson, Dinorah
author_facet Martinez Tyson, Dinorah
author_sort Martinez Tyson, Dinorah
title The Social Context of Stress and Social Support among Immigrant Latinas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer
title_short The Social Context of Stress and Social Support among Immigrant Latinas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer
title_full The Social Context of Stress and Social Support among Immigrant Latinas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer
title_fullStr The Social Context of Stress and Social Support among Immigrant Latinas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer
title_full_unstemmed The Social Context of Stress and Social Support among Immigrant Latinas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer
title_sort social context of stress and social support among immigrant latinas diagnosed with breast cancer
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2008
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/380
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1379&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT martineztysondinorah thesocialcontextofstressandsocialsupportamongimmigrantlatinasdiagnosedwithbreastcancer
AT martineztysondinorah socialcontextofstressandsocialsupportamongimmigrantlatinasdiagnosedwithbreastcancer
_version_ 1719260536784289792