Reconstructing trust in preventive care: Black women's perspectives on equity-centered, cervical cancer interventions.
1/5 보강
[BACKGROUND] Black women in the United States face disproportionately high rates of cervical cancer incidence and mortality, driven in part by structural racism, medical mistrust, and barriers to cult
APA
Adekunle TE, Adekunle TB, Thomas S (2026). Reconstructing trust in preventive care: Black women's perspectives on equity-centered, cervical cancer interventions.. Ethnicity & health, 31(1), 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1080/13557858.2025.2577130
MLA
Adekunle TE, et al.. "Reconstructing trust in preventive care: Black women's perspectives on equity-centered, cervical cancer interventions.." Ethnicity & health, vol. 31, no. 1, 2026, pp. 1-18.
PMID
41139670 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
[BACKGROUND] Black women in the United States face disproportionately high rates of cervical cancer incidence and mortality, driven in part by structural racism, medical mistrust, and barriers to culturally responsive care. Existing interventions often overlook the lived experiences of Black women and fail to address the systemic roots of healthcare inequities.
[OBJECTIVE] To explore how Black women conceptualize healthcare mistrust and identify multilevel changes needed to improve cervical cancer screening and equity-centered preventive care.
[METHODS] Seventeen in-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with self-identified Black women aged 21-65 years between February and April 2023. Guided by an integrated theoretical framework including Ecological Systems Theory, Ecosocial Theory of Embodiment, Intersectionality, and Black Feminist Thought. Interviews were thematically analyzed to surface key barriers and recommendations. Participants were recruited through purposive sampling, and thematic saturation was achieved.
[RESULTS] Four major themes emerged: (1) increasing access to affordable, community-centered healthcare; (2) expanding reproductive health knowledge and addressing informational gaps; (3) enhancing provider training in diversity, equity, and culturally responsive care; and (4) implementing systemic reforms to rebuild trust and deliver holistic, justice-driven healthcare. Participants underscored the importance of long-term community engagement, generational knowledge transfer, and trauma-informed care. Trust was framed as a central determinant, shaped by intersecting histories of discrimination and institutional exclusion.
[CONCLUSIONS] This study highlights the urgent need for systemic transformation in preventive care delivery. Improving cervical cancer outcomes among Black women requires multilevel strategies that prioritize trust, equity, and the leadership of communities most affected. These insights inform policy, provider training, and structural reforms aimed at advancing justice in healthcare.
[OBJECTIVE] To explore how Black women conceptualize healthcare mistrust and identify multilevel changes needed to improve cervical cancer screening and equity-centered preventive care.
[METHODS] Seventeen in-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with self-identified Black women aged 21-65 years between February and April 2023. Guided by an integrated theoretical framework including Ecological Systems Theory, Ecosocial Theory of Embodiment, Intersectionality, and Black Feminist Thought. Interviews were thematically analyzed to surface key barriers and recommendations. Participants were recruited through purposive sampling, and thematic saturation was achieved.
[RESULTS] Four major themes emerged: (1) increasing access to affordable, community-centered healthcare; (2) expanding reproductive health knowledge and addressing informational gaps; (3) enhancing provider training in diversity, equity, and culturally responsive care; and (4) implementing systemic reforms to rebuild trust and deliver holistic, justice-driven healthcare. Participants underscored the importance of long-term community engagement, generational knowledge transfer, and trauma-informed care. Trust was framed as a central determinant, shaped by intersecting histories of discrimination and institutional exclusion.
[CONCLUSIONS] This study highlights the urgent need for systemic transformation in preventive care delivery. Improving cervical cancer outcomes among Black women requires multilevel strategies that prioritize trust, equity, and the leadership of communities most affected. These insights inform policy, provider training, and structural reforms aimed at advancing justice in healthcare.
🏷️ 키워드 / MeSH 📖 같은 키워드 OA만
- Adult
- Aged
- Female
- Humans
- Middle Aged
- Young Adult
- Black or African American
- Early Detection of Cancer
- Health Equity
- Health Services Accessibility
- Healthcare Disparities
- Interviews as Topic
- Preventive Health Services
- Qualitative Research
- Trust
- United States
- Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
- Black women’s health
- Good health and well-being
- medical mistrust
- trust in healthcare
🏷️ 같은 키워드 · 무료전문 — 이 논문 MeSH/keyword 기반
- A Phase I Study of Hydroxychloroquine and Suba-Itraconazole in Men with Biochemical Relapse of Prostate Cancer (HITMAN-PC): Dose Escalation Results.
- Self-management of male urinary symptoms: qualitative findings from a primary care trial.
- Clinical and Liquid Biomarkers of 20-Year Prostate Cancer Risk in Men Aged 45 to 70 Years.
- Diagnostic accuracy of Ga-PSMA PET/CT versus multiparametric MRI for preoperative pelvic invasion in the patients with prostate cancer.
- Clinical Presentation and Outcomes of Patients Undergoing Surgery for Thyroid Cancer.
- Association of patient health education with the postoperative health related quality of life in low- intermediate recurrence risk differentiated thyroid cancer patients.