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Cultural myths, superstitions, and stigma surrounding dementia in a UK Bangladeshi community

Cultural myths, superstitions, and stigma surrounding dementia in a UK Bangladeshi community
Cultural myths, superstitions, and stigma surrounding dementia in a UK Bangladeshi community
The last three census data highlighted that UK Bangladeshi communities have the worst health outcomes. This includes a higher risk of type two diabetes and heart diseases; both are risk factors for developing vascular dementia. However, little is known about Bangladeshi community members’ understandings of dementia, including cultural myths. This paper focuses on the cultural myths, superstitions, and stigma surrounding dementia in an English Bangladeshi community from the direct experiences of people living with dementia, their caregivers, and the views of dementia service providers/stakeholders. This qualitative research was undertaken with three distinct participant groups using semistructured interviews (n = 25), who were recruited from community settings. The first and second participant groups explored the experiences of people with dementia (n = 10) and their family caregivers (n = 10). The third group examined stakeholders’/service providers’ views (n = 5). Interviews were recorded digitally and transcribed verbatim. Findings were reached using an interpretive approach, emphasising the sense people make in their own lives and experiences and how they frame and understand dementia. The study revealed that participants with dementia and their caregivers have “alternative” knowledge about dementia and do not necessarily understand dementia in a Westernised scientific/biomedical context. Misconceptions about dementia and belief in various myths and superstitions can lead people to go to spiritual healers or practice traditional remedies rather than to their GPs, delaying their dementia diagnosis. This paper concludes that there is a lack of awareness among the Bangladeshi participants and a need for targeted awareness about dementia to help dispel cultural myths and combat the stigma surrounding dementia within the Bangladeshi community.
0966-0410
Hussain, Nazmul
8c2f80c1-edc7-4a17-b5b4-64c2ff7f62e2
Clark, Andrew
5884515e-9e59-4b1c-9939-4fd1ea722bc8
Innes, Anthea
3b342196-a93c-4e94-85c8-1a59d185d952
Chen, Qing-Wei
94ea91f3-67fc-454e-824d-23fd60d07ed8
Hussain, Nazmul
8c2f80c1-edc7-4a17-b5b4-64c2ff7f62e2
Clark, Andrew
5884515e-9e59-4b1c-9939-4fd1ea722bc8
Innes, Anthea
3b342196-a93c-4e94-85c8-1a59d185d952
Chen, Qing-Wei
94ea91f3-67fc-454e-824d-23fd60d07ed8

Hussain, Nazmul, Clark, Andrew and Innes, Anthea , Chen, Qing-Wei (ed.) (2024) Cultural myths, superstitions, and stigma surrounding dementia in a UK Bangladeshi community. Health & Social Care in the Community, 2024, [8823063]. (doi:10.1155/2024/8823063).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The last three census data highlighted that UK Bangladeshi communities have the worst health outcomes. This includes a higher risk of type two diabetes and heart diseases; both are risk factors for developing vascular dementia. However, little is known about Bangladeshi community members’ understandings of dementia, including cultural myths. This paper focuses on the cultural myths, superstitions, and stigma surrounding dementia in an English Bangladeshi community from the direct experiences of people living with dementia, their caregivers, and the views of dementia service providers/stakeholders. This qualitative research was undertaken with three distinct participant groups using semistructured interviews (n = 25), who were recruited from community settings. The first and second participant groups explored the experiences of people with dementia (n = 10) and their family caregivers (n = 10). The third group examined stakeholders’/service providers’ views (n = 5). Interviews were recorded digitally and transcribed verbatim. Findings were reached using an interpretive approach, emphasising the sense people make in their own lives and experiences and how they frame and understand dementia. The study revealed that participants with dementia and their caregivers have “alternative” knowledge about dementia and do not necessarily understand dementia in a Westernised scientific/biomedical context. Misconceptions about dementia and belief in various myths and superstitions can lead people to go to spiritual healers or practice traditional remedies rather than to their GPs, delaying their dementia diagnosis. This paper concludes that there is a lack of awareness among the Bangladeshi participants and a need for targeted awareness about dementia to help dispel cultural myths and combat the stigma surrounding dementia within the Bangladeshi community.

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Accepted/In Press date: 23 January 2024
Published date: 19 February 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487691
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487691
ISSN: 0966-0410
PURE UUID: 4279a92f-d790-4426-89ac-3b4a53e400a1
ORCID for Nazmul Hussain: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0004-2563-5253

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Date deposited: 01 Mar 2024 17:35
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:13

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Contributors

Author: Nazmul Hussain ORCID iD
Author: Andrew Clark
Author: Anthea Innes
Editor: Qing-Wei Chen

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