Khan Sarah, Woolhead Gillian
College of Sustainability Sciences and Humanities, Zayed University, PO Box 19282, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Department of Public Health and Policy, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, L69 3GL, United Kingdom.
BMC Womens Health. 2015 Oct 24;15:90. doi: 10.1186/s12905-015-0252-8.
Cervical cancer (CC) is the seventh leading cause of death among women in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), with most deaths attributed to late detection of this cancer. The UAE lacks a national CC screening programme. Thus, cervical screening is only performed opportunistically during women's visits to health facilities. CC screening rates in the UAE are as low as 16.9 %, and little is known about the perspectives of the nation's educated Muslim women regarding screening. Consequently, the aim of this study is to explore Muslim women's perspectives towards cervical screening in Dubai to promote strategies for increasing its uptake, thereby leading to a decrease in morbidity and mortality associated with CC.
Interpretivist and social constructivist epistemological approaches were applied for this qualitative study. Data were obtained through 13 in-depth interviews. Purposive and snowballing methods were used to recruit six South Asian women and seven Emirati women living in Dubai. Thematic content analysis was concurrently applied with comparative analysis to the data.
Four themes regarding women's perceptions of CC emerged from the data. First, CC was considered a 'silent disease' that could be detected with early screening. However, it was also associated with extramarital sexual relations, which negatively influenced screening uptake. Second, women's fear, pain and embarrassment, along with cultural influences, deterred them from undergoing screening. Third, a growing mistrust of allopathic medicine and impersonal healthcare promoted a negative view of screening. Last, women became aware of screening mainly when they were pregnant or receiving fertility treatment.
The study highlighted a number of important factors relating to cultural, religious and sexual behaviour that shaped educated Muslim women's perspectives on CC screening. Evidently, the current opportunistic approach to screening is flawed. A national awareness programme on CC screening should be developed, tailored to the sociocultural norms of the Muslim community, to promote knowledge regarding the causes of CC and the importance of screening.
宫颈癌(CC)是阿拉伯联合酋长国(阿联酋)女性死亡的第七大主要原因,大多数死亡归因于该癌症的晚期发现。阿联酋缺乏全国性的宫颈癌筛查计划。因此,宫颈癌筛查仅在女性前往医疗机构就诊时机会性地进行。阿联酋的宫颈癌筛查率低至16.9%,对于该国受过教育的穆斯林女性对筛查的看法知之甚少。因此,本研究的目的是探讨迪拜穆斯林女性对宫颈癌筛查的看法,以促进提高筛查接受率的策略,从而降低与宫颈癌相关的发病率和死亡率。
本定性研究采用解释主义和社会建构主义认识论方法。通过13次深入访谈获取数据。采用目的抽样和滚雪球抽样方法招募了6名居住在迪拜的南亚女性和7名阿联酋女性。对数据同时应用主题内容分析和比较分析。
数据中出现了关于女性对宫颈癌认知的四个主题。首先,宫颈癌被认为是一种“无声疾病”,可以通过早期筛查发现。然而,它也与婚外性关系有关,这对筛查接受率产生了负面影响。其次,女性的恐惧、疼痛和尴尬,以及文化影响,阻碍了她们接受筛查。第三,对西医和冷漠医疗保健的不信任日益增加,导致对筛查产生负面看法。最后,女性主要在怀孕或接受生育治疗时才意识到筛查。
该研究强调了一些与文化、宗教和性行为相关的重要因素,这些因素塑造了受过教育的穆斯林女性对宫颈癌筛查的看法。显然,目前的机会性筛查方法存在缺陷。应制定一项针对穆斯林社区社会文化规范的全国性宫颈癌筛查宣传计划,以促进对宫颈癌病因和筛查重要性的认识。