Acceptability of a multicomponent, community-based, HPV self-test intervention among Jamaican women
Autor: | Soroya Julian McFarlane, Susan E. Morgan, Matthew Schlumbrecht |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Jamaica Cancer Research medicine.medical_specialty Uterine Cervical Neoplasms Context (language use) Trust 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Epidemiology medicine Humans Mass Screening 030212 general & internal medicine Pap test Papillomaviridae Socioeconomic status Aged Vaginal Smears Cervical cancer medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry Public health Papillomavirus Infections Middle Aged medicine.disease Self Efficacy Outreach Oncology 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Family medicine Structured interview Female business Papanicolaou Test |
Zdroj: | Cancer Causes & Control. 32:547-554 |
ISSN: | 1573-7225 0957-5243 |
Popis: | Jamaican women do not participate in routine Pap test screening as recommended, despite the availability of free Pap test services at community clinics. This low uptake has been associated with cultural and structural barriers such as limited knowledge and awareness, fear of pain associated with Pap tests, fear of diagnosis, modesty or self-consciousness, medical mistrust, and discontent with healthcare services. This study suggests that a multicomponent, community-based intervention that includes education and self-testing for the virus that causes cervical cancer (i.e., Human Papillomavirus, HPV) might increase screening rates. Community outreach workers were hired and recruited 163 women from two low socioeconomic status communities in Kingston, aged 30 to 65 years, and who had not had a Pap test in at least 3 years, to use an HPV self-test kit. Almost all the women (95.6%) used and returned the kit and reported in structured interviews that it was easy to use and preferable to visiting a doctor. Paired samples t-tests revealed that participants perceived higher threat of cervical cancer, greater susceptibility to cancer, greater sense of self-efficacy, and more positive screening social norms at post-test than at pretest. Among returners, 22% had an oncogenic HPV type detected in their sample. Findings demonstrate high acceptability of the HPV self-test among Jamaican women and, therefore, the potential of HPV self-test tools to increase screening uptake. Community-based approaches to disseminate this tool, such as outreach workers and educational small group sessions, appear to be culturally appropriate and effective in this context. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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