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      Health-care-related attitudes and utilization among African American women.

      1 , ,
      Women's health (Hillsdale, N.J.)

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          Abstract

          This study examined attitudes of African American women toward medical care and health insurance. Data were analyzed from the National Medical Expenditure Survey, a large household survey conducted by the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research and focusing on insurance and health care utilization. The responses of African American women tended neither to downplay the importance of receiving health care as essential to health maintenance and recovery from illness, nor to minimize health insurance as a worthwhile investment. When African American women did give responses discounting the importance of health care, the attitude difference failed to account for race-related differences in utilization. There was no evidence in the data to indicate that attitudes lead African American women to neglect seeking medical care or acquiring health insurance, and solutions to the problem of medical care underutilization must be sought elsewhere.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Womens Health
          Women's health (Hillsdale, N.J.)
          1077-2928
          1077-2928
          January 14 1998
          : 3
          : 3-4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] School of Social Welfare, University of California at Berkeley 94720-7400, USA.
          Article
          9426498
          8f646b25-e93b-4231-9b79-989a24cf635e
          History

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