Title: Hepatitis B Knowledge and Behaviors in Asian Immigrants
1Hepatitis B and Liver Cancer Prevention in Asian
Americans How Culture Affects the Research
Endeavor Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention Health Promotion Research
Initiative John H. Choe, MD, MPH University of
Washington
D. WeXler, Immunization Action Coalition
2Overview
- Context of the clinical and public health problem
of hepatitis B infection in Asian immigrants - Recent and ongoing work in hepatitis prevention
among Asians in Seattle - Community participatory methods and the interplay
between qualitative, quantitative methods in
developing tailored interventions - Examples from current K01 work
- How culture affects the research endeavor
lessons - Moving beyond ethnicity in tailoring
interventions?
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4Hepatitis B Clinical Implications
- Hepatitis B viral (HBV) infection can be acute
(active) or chronic (often silent) - Chronic HBV infection leads to primary liver
cancer or cirrhosis in around one-quarter - Liver cancer is potentially vaccine-preventable
- U.S. control measures focused on maternal ? child
- Programs for adults to reduce horizontal
transmission mainly modeled on familiar high
risk populations (STD, homeless, IVDU, prisoners)
5HBV in Immigrants
- Asians are half of all chronic HBV infected in
the U.S. - Chronic infection prevalence between 4-18
- Peak complication from chronic HBV 4th-5th
decades - Immigration from endemic areas continues
- Transmission within households often several
generations in one home - Focus upon children and adults with high risk
behaviors miss this large pool of HBV infected - Language/ cultural appropriateness of prevention
6Asian Americans and Liver Cancer
Age-adjusted Liver Cancer Incidence Men,
1988-92
7Hepatitis B versus C and HIV
- World
US - HIV 31 million
0.8 million - Hepatitis C 170 million 4.0
million - Hepatitis B 400 million 1.3
million - In US 130,000 new hepatitis B infection /year
- 5,000 die from hepatitis B liver
disease
8Tailoring HBV Interventions
- Active and recent prevention research in Asian
immigrant communities in Seattle - Vietnamese
- Cambodians
- Chinese
- Koreans
- Culturally and linguistically appropriate
education to increase serologic detection of
chronically infected - Moving beyond tailoring messages by ethnic
group?
9Tailoring HBV Interventions
- Active and recent prevention research in Asian
immigrant communities in Seattle - Vietnamese
- Cambodians
- Chinese
- Koreans
- Culturally and linguistically appropriate
education to increase serologic detection of
chronically infected - Moving beyond tailoring messages by ethnic
group?
10CBPR for Cultural Context
- Community-based participatory methods
- Trust-building and listening ? Time and
opportunities - Also other cultures, including research
culture, university culture, and social service
agency culture - Community advisory board as equal partners
- For me, took at least four years
11Qualitative Tools
Previous Experience/ Mentors
Quantitative Tools
12Qualitative Tools
Previous Experience/ Mentors
Quantitative Tools
Intervention
13Qualitative Tools
Previous Experience/ Mentors
Quantitative Tools
Community Board
Intervention
14Community Partners
- Korean Aging Service Coalition
- Korean Community Counseling Center
- Korean Womens Association
- Washington Korean Dry Cleaners Association
- Korean American Professionals Society
- Asian Counseling and Referral Services
- Kawabe Memorial House
- Washington State Asian Pacific Islander Task
Force on Hepatitis B
15Example Travel for Healthcare
- Qualitative data from interviews revealed many
regularly travel to Korea for routine medical
care - I had a language problem so Every time when I
went to visit my mother in Korea, I went to see
Dr. Kim for yearly checkup. - Community advisory board confirmed this was
common, and some even did this themselves
16Example Travel (cont.)
- Quantitative survey data (467 Korean adults)
- Have you ever traveled to Korea to take care of
a medical problem? ? Yes 10 - Challenges for intervention
- Continuity of care
- Diagnosis can sometimes require careful clinician
- 3-dose vaccine given over a course of up to a year
17Example Food as HBV Vector
- Qualitative interviews
- Lots of Korean families sit together sharing
food in the same bowl We all share a part of a
stew by dipping everybodys spoon, not like in
the U.S. lack of sanitation causes more
hepatitis through sharing same utensils. - Quantitative survey Factors that spread HBV?
- Eating unclean food 82
- Sharing eating utensils 79
- Eating food prepared by someone with HBV 51
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19Example Food (cont.)
- Community advisory board
- Cant avoid it
- I use serving plates, but everyone thinks its
strange - If you make me give up kim-chee, Im not Korean
- Challenges for intervention
- More people believe this, than know childbirth or
sexual intercourse as routes of transmission - Need for repeated education on this point
- No need to change deep-seated cultural practice
20Lessons Learned Process
- Translation time and money costs significant
- From other projects garbage in garbage out
- Academic vs. Community cultural differences
are as significant a barrier as any ethnic
differences - Finding right cultural broker important the
wrong one can slow down or damage project (4
years) - Small communities ? Small politics
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22Lessons Learned Opportunities/ Threats
- Investment time and opportunity costs are very
high - Stakes higher for junior investigator (but
grateful for the protection of the K01!) - High payoff potential Community opportunities
open when the investigator gives freely
23Third Generation Studies
- Pasick et al argued for cross-culture studies
- 1st Gen Health promotion programs without regard
to race/ ethnicity 2nd Gen Tailored race/
ethnic specific research and programs - 3rd Generation Comparative studies across groups
- Finding common elements shared between groups
will allow more refined health programs,
segmenting according to specific health beliefs - For greater efficiency and economy
24Acknowledgements
- Vicky Taylor
- Beti Thompson
- Jeffrey Harris
- Shin-Ping Tu
- Carey Jackson
- Scott Ramsey
- Yutaka Yasui
- Roshan Bastani
Community Advisory Board members and supporting
community organizations CDC Health Promotion
Research Initiative
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