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Empowered Choices: African-American Women's Breast Reconstruction Decisions

Shahnjayla K. Connors, Isabel Martinez Leal, Vijay Nitturi, Chisom N. Iwundu, Valentina Maza, Stacey Reyes, Chiara Acquati, Lorraine R. Reitzel

2021American Journal of Health Behavior23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objectives: Breast reconstruction (BR) potentially can improve quality of life in postmastectomy breast cancer survivors (BCS); however, African-American women are less likely to undergo BR than Caucasian women. This qualitative study was undertaken to explore individual, sociocultural, and contextual factors influencing African-American women's BR decision-making processes and preferences. Methods: Postmastectomy African-American BCS with and without BR participated in semi-structured interviews. We adopted a grounded theory approach using the constant comparison method to understand the contexts and processes informing participants' BR decision-making. Results: Twenty-three women participated, of whom 17 elected BR and 6 did not. Whereas women's primary reasons for deciding for or against BR differed, our core category, " empowered choices ," describes both groups' decision-making as a process focused on empowering themselves physically and/or psychologically, through self-advocacy, informed and shared decision-making, and giving back/receiving communal and spiritual support from church and African-American survivor groups. Socioeconomic factors influenced women's access to BR. Women preferred autologous BR and expressed the need for greater culturally-matched resources and support to inform treatment and shared BR decision-making. Conclusions: Understanding and supporting African-American women's BR preferences and empowerment is essential to ensuring equal access, and culturally-relevant, high-quality, and informed patient-centered care.

Topics & Concepts

EmpowermentGrounded theorySocioeconomic statusAfrican americanSociocultural evolutionPsychologyQualitative researchBreast cancerSocial psychologyMedicineSociologyPopulationPolitical scienceCancerDemographyEthnologySocial scienceLawInternal medicineAnthropologyPalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesCancer survivorship and carePatient Dignity and Privacy
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