Kohler Racquel E, Gopal Satish, Lee Clara N, Weiner Bryan J, Reeve Bryce B, Wheeler Stephanie B
, , , , , and , University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; and and , UNC Project Malawi, Lilongwe, Malawi.
J Glob Oncol. 2017 Apr 21;3(5):480-489. doi: 10.1200/JGO.2016.005371. eCollection 2017 Oct.
Breast cancer is the most common female cancer in Africa and leading cause of death resulting from cancer; however, many countries lack early detection services. In Malawi, women are frequently diagnosed with large tumors after long symptomatic periods. Little is known about local cancer knowledge.
We administered a cross-sectional survey with a discrete choice experiment to a random sample in urban and rural areas of Lilongwe district. Bivariable and multivariable analyses determined factors associated with knowledge. Preference utilities for early detection interventions were estimated using a hierarchical Bayesian model in Sawtooth software.
Of 213 women recruited, fewer than half were aware of breast cancer. In multivariable analysis, electricity at home and knowing someone with cancer increased the odds of awareness. Women were more knowledgeable about symptoms than treatment or risk factors; more than 60% erroneously believed local misconceptions. Seventeen percent were aware of breast self-examination, and 20% were aware of clinical breast examination (CBE); few reported either behavior. Common barriers included not knowing where to access CBE and transportation difficulties. Discrete choice experiment results indicated the detection strategy (breast health awareness, CBE, or both) was the most important attribute of an intervention, followed by the encounter setting and travel time.
Addressing misconceptions in health messages and engaging survivors to promote early detection may help improve breast cancer knowledge in Malawi. Program designs accounting for women's preferences should provide breast health education and CBEs in convenient settings to address transportation barriers, particularly for women with low socioeconomic position.
乳腺癌是非洲最常见的女性癌症,也是癌症致死的主要原因;然而,许多国家缺乏早期检测服务。在马拉维,女性常常在出现症状很长时间后才被诊断出患有大肿瘤。人们对当地的癌症知识了解甚少。
我们在利隆圭区的城乡地区对一个随机样本进行了一项包含离散选择实验的横断面调查。双变量和多变量分析确定了与知识相关的因素。使用锯齿软件中的分层贝叶斯模型估计了早期检测干预措施的偏好效用。
在招募的213名女性中,不到一半的人知晓乳腺癌。在多变量分析中,家中通电以及认识患癌之人会增加知晓的几率。女性对症状的了解比对治疗或风险因素的了解更多;超过60%的人错误地相信当地的误解。17%的人知晓乳房自我检查,20%的人知晓临床乳房检查(CBE);很少有人报告有这两种行为。常见障碍包括不知道在哪里进行CBE以及交通困难。离散选择实验结果表明,检测策略(乳房健康意识、CBE或两者兼具)是干预措施中最重要的属性,其次是就诊环境和出行时间。
消除健康信息中的误解并让幸存者参与以促进早期检测,可能有助于提高马拉维的乳腺癌知识水平。考虑到女性偏好的项目设计应在便利的环境中提供乳房健康教育和CBE,以消除交通障碍,特别是对于社会经济地位较低的女性。