Coe Kathryn, Martin Lorencita, Nuvayestewa Leon, Attakai Agnes, Papenfuss Mary, De Zapien Jill Guernsey, Seymour Sallie Saltzman, Hunter Jennie, Giuliano Anna
Arizona Cancer Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85724-5024, USA.
Health Care Women Int. 2007 Oct;28(9):764-81. doi: 10.1080/07399330701562956.
Between July and December 1993, the Hopi Department of Health Services, in collaboration with the Arizona Cancer Center (AZCC), conducted a population-based study of cervical cancer risk factors, screening practices, and predictors of Pap test utilization among American Indian women age 18 years and older living on the Hopi reservation in northern Arizona. This survey, entitled the Healthy Hopi Women's Study, involved a stratified random sample of households from each of the 11 Hopi villages. The final study sample was 559 completed face-to-face interviews. This article reports on unpublished findings of the survey and discusses how the Hopi utilized the study's findings to develop a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-funded breast and cervical cancer program.
1993年7月至12月期间,霍皮族卫生服务部与亚利桑那癌症中心(AZCC)合作,针对居住在亚利桑那州北部霍皮族保留地、年龄在18岁及以上的美国印第安女性,开展了一项关于宫颈癌风险因素、筛查实践以及巴氏试验应用预测因素的基于人群的研究。这项名为“健康霍皮族女性研究”的调查,涉及从11个霍皮族村庄中每个村庄抽取的分层随机样本家庭。最终的研究样本是559份完成的面对面访谈。本文报告了该调查未发表的结果,并讨论了霍皮族如何利用该研究结果来开展一项由疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)资助的乳腺癌和宫颈癌项目。