Parental health beliefs and respiratory illness consultations at general practitioners in multi-ethnic and multi-cultural areas

This research was concerned with how parents from different ethnic groups manage their children's respiratory and febrile illnesses, and their consultations at the general practitioner (GP). A review of the few British studies looking at parental health behaviour revealed that parents are conti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Clarke, Andy
Other Authors: Hewison, J.
Published: University of Leeds 1989
Subjects:
150
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.234665
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-234665
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-2346652017-10-04T03:31:54ZParental health beliefs and respiratory illness consultations at general practitioners in multi-ethnic and multi-cultural areasClarke, AndyHewison, J.1989This research was concerned with how parents from different ethnic groups manage their children's respiratory and febrile illnesses, and their consultations at the general practitioner (GP). A review of the few British studies looking at parental health behaviour revealed that parents are continually having to make complex decisions, in which the clinical characteristics of the illness and the behaviour of the child are the most important factors in predictions of what the parent will do. Despite the belief among some GPs that their Asian patients consult more often and for trivial illnesses, we predicted that consultations, however many there are, will reflect rational decisions on the part of the parents. What may appear trivial to a doctor may not be for a parent. Including our pilot studies, we interviewed parents of 159 children - aged between two and eleven years - from three general practices in the inner-city area of Leeds. These parents were either white and indigenous, Muslims, Sikhs or Afro-Caribbeans; and approximately half of the children had been taken to see the doctor in the previous fortnight with a respiratory/febrile complaint, whereas the other half had not been to see a doctor for at least four months.150Ethnic groups' health beliefsUniversity of Leedshttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.234665http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/1514/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 150
Ethnic groups' health beliefs
spellingShingle 150
Ethnic groups' health beliefs
Clarke, Andy
Parental health beliefs and respiratory illness consultations at general practitioners in multi-ethnic and multi-cultural areas
description This research was concerned with how parents from different ethnic groups manage their children's respiratory and febrile illnesses, and their consultations at the general practitioner (GP). A review of the few British studies looking at parental health behaviour revealed that parents are continually having to make complex decisions, in which the clinical characteristics of the illness and the behaviour of the child are the most important factors in predictions of what the parent will do. Despite the belief among some GPs that their Asian patients consult more often and for trivial illnesses, we predicted that consultations, however many there are, will reflect rational decisions on the part of the parents. What may appear trivial to a doctor may not be for a parent. Including our pilot studies, we interviewed parents of 159 children - aged between two and eleven years - from three general practices in the inner-city area of Leeds. These parents were either white and indigenous, Muslims, Sikhs or Afro-Caribbeans; and approximately half of the children had been taken to see the doctor in the previous fortnight with a respiratory/febrile complaint, whereas the other half had not been to see a doctor for at least four months.
author2 Hewison, J.
author_facet Hewison, J.
Clarke, Andy
author Clarke, Andy
author_sort Clarke, Andy
title Parental health beliefs and respiratory illness consultations at general practitioners in multi-ethnic and multi-cultural areas
title_short Parental health beliefs and respiratory illness consultations at general practitioners in multi-ethnic and multi-cultural areas
title_full Parental health beliefs and respiratory illness consultations at general practitioners in multi-ethnic and multi-cultural areas
title_fullStr Parental health beliefs and respiratory illness consultations at general practitioners in multi-ethnic and multi-cultural areas
title_full_unstemmed Parental health beliefs and respiratory illness consultations at general practitioners in multi-ethnic and multi-cultural areas
title_sort parental health beliefs and respiratory illness consultations at general practitioners in multi-ethnic and multi-cultural areas
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 1989
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.234665
work_keys_str_mv AT clarkeandy parentalhealthbeliefsandrespiratoryillnessconsultationsatgeneralpractitionersinmultiethnicandmulticulturalareas
_version_ 1718544477147103232