2002
DOI: 10.1177/10432302012006006
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Diabetes: The Layperson’s Theories of Causality

Abstract: The authors examine laypersons' perspectives of illness: the content of causal explanations of diabetes and differences in explanations according to gender. Qualitative research was carried out in Guadalajara, Mexico. A nonprobabilistic sample of 20 diabetic individuals participated in interviews, and the content of the interviews was analyzed. On the origin of their condition, participants offered explanations that match neither the biomedical model nor any other formal causal theory. Participants attributed … Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Interviews involving more than one participant have been used to successfully in nutrition research (e.g. Mercado‐Martinez & Ramos‐Herrera, 2002; Gronhoj & Olander, 2007) but do require skill to moderate well.…”
Section: What Techniques Are Available For Collecting Qualitative Data?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interviews involving more than one participant have been used to successfully in nutrition research (e.g. Mercado‐Martinez & Ramos‐Herrera, 2002; Gronhoj & Olander, 2007) but do require skill to moderate well.…”
Section: What Techniques Are Available For Collecting Qualitative Data?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because most of the research about patient explanatory models for diabetes addresses beliefs among Latin American populations (Coronado et al 2004; Hunt et al 1998; Jezewski and Poss 2002; Mercado‐Martinez and Ramos‐Herrera 2002; Weller et al 1999), there is a presumption that ethnicity may be the key variable contributing to the construction of such models, as opposed to other social, cultural, behavioral, psychological, and physiological factors. However, Schoenberg and colleagues (2005) demonstrate that low socioeconomic status patients of American Indian, African American, and Euro‐American descent were as likely to construct explanatory models that identify social distress as a cause of diabetes as those of Mexican American descent.…”
Section: Stress and Distress As Causes Of Diabetesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What seems to be most unique about Mexican and Mexican American explanatory models for diabetes is the powerful culturally elaborated idioms through which emotional experiences are frequently expressed. The most common idioms reported in these models include susto, an emotion roughly translated as fright and linked with acutely stressful experiences such as a car accident or being held at gunpoint, and coraje, an emotion roughly translated as rage or anger associated with prolonged forms of distress such as child abuse, domestic violence, and betrayal (Mercado‐Martinez and Ramos‐Herrera 2002).…”
Section: Stress and Distress As Causes Of Diabetesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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