articleHealth Education & BehaviorApr 1, 2003Closed access

Achieving Cultural Appropriateness in Health Promotion Programs: Targeted and Tailored Approaches

Saint Louis University · University of Missouri–St. Louis

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

It is a truism of health education that programs and interventions will be more effective when they are culturally appropriate for the populations they serve. In practice, however, the strategies used to achieve cultural appropriateness vary widely. This article briefly describes five strategies commonly used to target programs to culturally defined groups. It then explains how a sixth approach, cultural tailoring, might extend these strategies and enhance our ability to develop effective programs for cultural groups. The authors illustrate this new approach with an example of cultural tailoring forcancer prevention in a population of lower income urban African American women.

Citation impact

1,231
total citations
FWCI
62.20
Percentile
100%
References
65
Citations per year

Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychological intervention
  • Health promotion
  • Culturally appropriate
  • Promotion (chess)
  • Cultural diversity
  • Cancer prevention
  • Health equity
  • Population
No related works found for this paper.