The Cultural Meaning of Cardiac Illness and Self-Care Among Lebanese Patients With Coronary Artery Disease
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SAGE Publications Inc.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiac disease is the leading cause of death in Lebanon, accounting for 22% to 26% of total deaths in the country. A thorough understanding of perceptions of cardiac illness and related self-care management is critical to the development of secondary prevention programs that are specific to the Lebanese culture. PURPOSE: To explore the cultural perceptions of cardiac illness and the associated meaning of self-care among Lebanese patients. DESIGN: Using a qualitative descriptive method, semistructured interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of 15 Lebanese cardiac patients recruited from a medical center in Beirut, Lebanon. FINDINGS: The qualitative descriptive analysis yielded one overarching and two other themes describing perceptions of cardiac illness and self-care within the Lebanese cultural context. The overarching cultural theme was, Lebanese cardiac patients were unfamiliar with the term concept and meaning of self-care. Lebanese cardiac patients thanked God and accepted their fate (Theme I). The participants considered their cardiac incident a life or death warning (Theme II). IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Health care providers need to consider patients' cultural perception of illness while planning and evaluating cardiac self-care programs.
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Adaptation, psychological, Aged, Coronary artery disease/ethnology/psychology/therapy, Cultural characteristics, Female, Health knowledge, attitudes, practice, Humans, Lebanon/ethnology, Male, Middle aged, Perception, Qualitative research, Self care/psychology, Spirituality, Cardiac illness perception, Cardiac self-care, Collective self-care, Self-care cultural meaning, Self-care perception