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Trisha Greenhalgh Qualitative Research Unit, Joint
Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, University College
London Medical School/Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine,
Whittington Hospital, London N19 5NF
Correspondence to:
Dr Greenhalgh p.greenhalgh{at}ucl.ac.uk
Objective: To explore the experience of diabetes in
British Bangladeshis, since successful management of diabetes requires attention not just to observable behaviour but to the underlying attitudes and belief systems which drive that behaviour.
Design: Qualitative study of subjects' experience of
diabetes using narratives, semi-structured interviews, focus groups, and pile sorting exercises. A new qualitative method, the structured vignette, was developed for validating researchers' understanding of
primary level culture.
Subjects: 40 British Bangladeshi patients with
diabetes, and 10 non-Bangladeshi controls, recruited from primary care.
Result: Several constructs were detected in relation
to body image, cause and nature of diabetes, food classification, and
knowledge of complications. In some areas, the similarities between
Bangladeshi and non-Bangladeshi subjects were as striking as their
differences. There was little evidence of a fatalistic or deterministic
attitude to prognosis, and most informants seemed highly motivated to
alter their diet and comply with treatment. Structural and material
barriers to behaviour change were at least as important as
"cultural" ones.
Conclusion: Bangladeshi culture is neither seamless
nor static, but some widely held beliefs and behaviours have been identified. Some of these have a potentially beneficial effect on
health and should be used as the starting point for culturally sensitive diabetes education.
© BMJ 1998