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Financial Hardship, Unmet Medical Need, and Health Self-Efficacy Among African American Men

Background. Health self-efficacy (the confidence to take care of one's health) is a key component in ensuring that individuals are active partners in their health and health care. The purpose of this study was to determine the association between financial hardship and health self-efficacy amon...

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Published in:Health education & behavior 2015-06, Vol.42 (3), p.285-292
Main Authors: Tucker-Seeley, Reginald D., Mitchell, Jamie A., Shires, Deirdre A., Modlin, Charles S.
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creator Tucker-Seeley, Reginald D.
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description Background. Health self-efficacy (the confidence to take care of one's health) is a key component in ensuring that individuals are active partners in their health and health care. The purpose of this study was to determine the association between financial hardship and health self-efficacy among African American men and to determine if unmet medical need due to cost potentially mediates this association. Method. Cross-sectional analysis was conducted using data from a convenience sample of African American men who attended a 1-day annual community health fair in Northeast. Ohio (N = 279). Modified Poisson regression models were estimated to obtain the relative risk of reporting low health self-efficacy. After adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics, those reporting financial hardship were 2.91 times, RR = 2.91 (confidence interval [1.24, 6.83]; p < .05), more likely to report low health self-efficacy. When unmet medical need due to cost was added to the model, the association between financial hardship and low health self-efficacy was no longer statistically significant. Conclusion. Our results suggest that the association between financial hardship and health self-efficacy can be explained by unmet medical need due to cost. Possible intervention efforts among African American men with low financial resources should consider expanding clinical and community-based health assessments to capture financial hardship and unmet medical need due to cost as potential contributors to low health self-efficacy.
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Health self-efficacy (the confidence to take care of one's health) is a key component in ensuring that individuals are active partners in their health and health care. The purpose of this study was to determine the association between financial hardship and health self-efficacy among African American men and to determine if unmet medical need due to cost potentially mediates this association. Method. Cross-sectional analysis was conducted using data from a convenience sample of African American men who attended a 1-day annual community health fair in Northeast. Ohio (N = 279). Modified Poisson regression models were estimated to obtain the relative risk of reporting low health self-efficacy. After adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics, those reporting financial hardship were 2.91 times, RR = 2.91 (confidence interval [1.24, 6.83]; p &lt; .05), more likely to report low health self-efficacy. When unmet medical need due to cost was added to the model, the association between financial hardship and low health self-efficacy was no longer statistically significant. Conclusion. Our results suggest that the association between financial hardship and health self-efficacy can be explained by unmet medical need due to cost. 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identifier ISSN: 1090-1981
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; ERIC; SAGE Journals
subjects Adult
African Americans
African Americans - ethnology
African Americans - statistics & numerical data
Aged
Brief Report
Correlation
Costs
Cross-Sectional Studies
Educational Attainment
Health Behavior
Health care
Health Insurance
Health Needs
Health Services Accessibility - economics
Humans
Income
Male
Males
Marital Status
Men
Middle Aged
Ohio
Patient Acceptance of Health Care - ethnology
Patient Acceptance of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
Personal finance
Poverty - statistics & numerical data
Regression (Statistics)
Self Efficacy
Socioeconomic Factors
Socioeconomic Status
Statistical Analysis
Surveys
title Financial Hardship, Unmet Medical Need, and Health Self-Efficacy Among African American Men
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