Donnelly Tam Truong, Al Khater Al-Hareth, Al Kuwari Mohamed Ghaith, Al-Bader Salha Bujassoum, Al-Meer Nabila, Abdulmalik Mariam, Singh Rajvir, Chaudhry Sofia, Fung Tak
University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Hamad Medical Corporation, Hamad General Hospital, Doha, Qatar.
BMJ Open. 2015 Jan 22;5(1):e005596. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005596.
Breast cancer incidence rates are rising in Qatar. Although the Qatari government provides subsidised healthcare and screening programmes that reduce cost barriers for residents, breast cancer screening (BCS) practices among women remain low. This study explores the influence of socioeconomic status on BCS among Arab women in Qatar.
A multicentre, cross-sectional quantitative survey was conducted with 1063 Arab women (87.5% response rate) in Qatar from March 2011 to July 2011. Women who were 35 years or older and had lived in Qatar for at least 10 years were recruited from seven primary healthcare centres and women's health clinics in urban and semiurban regions of Qatar. Associations between socioeconomic factors and BCS practice were estimated using χ(2) tests and multivariate logistic regression analyses.
Findings indicate that less than one-third of the participants practised BCS appropriately, whereas less than half of the participants were familiar with recent BCS guidelines. Married women and women with higher education and income levels were significantly more likely to be aware of and to practise BCS than women who had lower education and income levels.
Findings indicate low levels of awareness and low participation rates in BCS among Arab women in Qatar. Socioeconomic factors influence these women's participation in BCS activities. The strongest predictors for BCS practice are higher education and higher income levels.
Additional research is needed to explore the impact of economic factors on healthcare seeking behaviours in the Middle Eastern countries that have a high national gross domestic product where healthcare services are free or heavily subsidised by the government; promotion of BCS and intervention strategies in these countries should focus on raising awareness about breast cancer, the cost and benefit of early screening for this disease, particularly among low-income women.
卡塔尔的乳腺癌发病率正在上升。尽管卡塔尔政府提供补贴医疗保健和筛查项目,降低了居民的成本障碍,但女性中的乳腺癌筛查(BCS)做法仍然很少。本研究探讨社会经济地位对卡塔尔阿拉伯女性BCS的影响。
2011年3月至2011年7月,对卡塔尔1063名阿拉伯女性进行了多中心横断面定量调查(应答率87.5%)。年龄在35岁及以上且在卡塔尔居住至少10年的女性,是从卡塔尔城市和半城市地区的7个初级医疗保健中心和妇女健康诊所招募的。使用χ²检验和多变量逻辑回归分析估计社会经济因素与BCS做法之间的关联。
研究结果表明,不到三分之一的参与者进行了适当的BCS,而不到一半的参与者熟悉最近的BCS指南。已婚女性以及教育程度和收入水平较高的女性,比教育程度和收入水平较低的女性更有可能知晓并进行BCS。
研究结果表明,卡塔尔阿拉伯女性对BCS的知晓水平低,参与率也低。社会经济因素影响这些女性参与BCS活动。BCS做法的最强预测因素是较高的教育程度和较高的收入水平。
需要进行更多研究,以探讨经济因素对中东国家医疗寻求行为的影响,这些国家国内生产总值高,医疗服务免费或由政府大量补贴;在这些国家促进BCS和干预策略应侧重于提高对乳腺癌的认识、这种疾病早期筛查的成本和益处,特别是在低收入女性中。