Shepherd J, Weston R, Peersman G, Napuli I Z
NCCHTA, Wessex Institute for Health Research and Development, University of Southampton, Boldrewood, Bassett Crescent East, Southampton, Hants, UK, SO16 7PX.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2000(2):CD001035. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD001035.
Cervical cancer is one of the most common cancers affecting women world-wide. Prevention falls into two main categories - primary and secondary. Primary prevention is characterised by health promotion to promote lifestyles and behaviours minimising risk of cervical cancer. Interventions to promote the use of condoms for sexual intercourse (especially early intercourse amongst young women), sexual partner reduction, and negotiated safer sex strategies has been recommended as one approach to limit the spread of Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), one of the major risk factors for cervical cancer.
To determine the effectiveness of health education interventions to promote sexual risk reduction behaviours amongst women in order to reduce transmission of HPV.
Electronic searching of EMBASE, ERIC, MEDLINE, PsycLIT, Social Science Citation Index and the CCTR were undertaken using a highly sensitive search strategy. Hand-searching took place of selected journals and reference lists.
Studies were included if they evaluated educational interventions targeting women only, and measured the impact on : either a behavioural outcome such as condom use for sexual intercourse, partner reduction, or abstinence; or a clinical outcome such as incidence of a sexually transmitted disease (STD).
Data were extracted and methodological quality was assessed independently by two reviewers and any discrepancies were resolved between them. Ten per cent of the total number of studies were reviewed additionally by a third reviewer as a quality check and differences in judgement were resolved accordingly.
Thirty trials met the inclusion criteria for the review. All of them had the primary aim of preventing HIV and other STDs rather than cervical cancer. Four core methodological qualities were present in 10 of the 30 studies and constitute the subset from which potentially reliable conclusions may be drawn. Each of the 10 studies showed a statistically significant positive effect on sexual risk reduction, typically with increased use of condoms for vaginal intercourse. This positive effect was generally sustained up to three months after intervention.
REVIEWER'S CONCLUSIONS: Educational interventions targeting socially and economically disadvantaged women in which information provision is complemented by sexual negotiation skill development can encourage at least short-term sexual risk reduction behaviour. This has the potential to reduce the transmission of HPV, thus possibly reduce the incidence of cervical carcinoma.
宫颈癌是全球影响女性的最常见癌症之一。预防分为两大类——一级预防和二级预防。一级预防的特点是通过促进健康来推广有助于降低患宫颈癌风险的生活方式和行为。建议采取干预措施来促进在性交时使用避孕套(尤其是年轻女性中的过早性交情况)、减少性伴侣以及协商更安全的性行为策略,以此作为限制人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)传播的一种方法,HPV是宫颈癌的主要风险因素之一。
确定健康教育干预措施在促进女性降低性风险行为以减少HPV传播方面的有效性。
采用高度敏感的检索策略对EMBASE、ERIC、MEDLINE、PsycLIT、社会科学引文索引和CCTR进行电子检索。对手选期刊和参考文献列表进行手工检索。
如果研究评估的是仅针对女性的教育干预措施,并测量了对以下方面的影响,则纳入研究:要么是行为结果,如性交时使用避孕套、减少性伴侣或禁欲;要么是临床结果,如性传播疾病(STD)的发病率。
由两名评审员独立提取数据并评估方法学质量,他们之间的任何差异都得到了解决。作为质量检查,第三位评审员额外审查了研究总数的10%,并相应解决了判断上的差异。
30项试验符合该综述的纳入标准。所有试验的主要目的都是预防艾滋病毒和其他性传播疾病,而非宫颈癌。30项研究中有10项具备四项核心方法学质量,这些研究构成了可能得出可靠结论的子集。这10项研究中的每一项都显示出在降低性风险方面具有统计学上显著的积极效果,通常表现为阴道性交时避孕套使用的增加。这种积极效果在干预后通常可持续长达三个月。
针对社会经济地位不利女性的教育干预措施,在提供信息的同时辅以性协商技能培养,能够鼓励至少短期的降低性风险行为。这有可能减少HPV的传播,从而可能降低宫颈癌的发病率。