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2.
Heliyon ; 9(2): e13180, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36798760

ABSTRACT

Native Hawaiians have a disproportionately high prevalence of hypertension, which is an important and modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). To reduce CVD among Native Hawaiians, we must better understand facilitators and barriers to hypertension management (i.e., diet, physical activity, stress reduction) unique to Native Hawaiians. Despite evidence of neighborhood-level facilitators and barriers to hypertension management in other populations, there is limited research in Native Hawaiians. Participants from a randomized controlled trial (n = 40) were recruited for 5 focus groups. All participants were self-reported Native Hawaiians and had uncontrolled hypertension. Discussions elicited experiences and perceptions of neighborhood-level stressors as they relate to participants' hypertension management efforts. Audio recordings were transcribed and analyzed using ATLAS.ti for emergent themes. Five themes were identified: neighborhood description, community resources, neighborhood change, safety, and social connectedness. Novel barriers to hypertension control included loss of culture and loss of respect for elders, change in community feel, and over-development. Facilitators included social cohesion and collective power. These data provide a deeper understanding of how Native Hawaiians experience neighborhood factors and how those factors impact their efforts to improve their diets, physical activity, and stress management. The findings help to inform the development of multilevel CVD prevention programs. Further research is needed to explore the subtheme of social and emotional stress related to neighborhood change and CVD health risk due to cultural and historic trauma references.

3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34072764

ABSTRACT

The importance of nature and the environment in relation to human health is coalescing, as demonstrated by the increased research that attempts to measure nature connectedness and relatedness. These findings align with constructs of cultural connectedness that assess for land connectedness as part of Indigenous ways of knowing. From an Indigenous worldview, relationships with the environment are critical to wellbeing. The purpose of this comprehensive systematic scoping literature review was two-fold: (1) identify and summarize existing measures of land, nature, and/or environmental connectedness, relatedness, and attitudes and (2) evaluate the psychometric properties of these scales. In total, 1438 articles were retrieved from select databases including PubMed/MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL (EBSCO), and Academic Search Complete (EBSCO). The final searches and application of the inclusion/exclusion criteria resulted in 57 unique articles and 38 scales categorized as connectedness and relatedness scales (n = 9 scales), attitudinal and values-based scales (n = 16 scales), cultural and spiritually based scales (n = 9 scales), and paradigm-based scales (n = 4 scales) (articles could be placed in multiple categories). Psychometric properties and general outcomes associated with nature-related scales are reported, with implications for future education, research, practice, and policy.


Subject(s)
Attitude , Humans , Psychometrics
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