1 Epidemiology and Applied Research Branch, Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , Atlanta, Georgia .
2 National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Disease Promotion, Division of Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , Atlanta, Georgia .
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2018 May;27(5):630-639. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2017.6528. Epub 2018 Jan 29.
Women facing complex and uncertain situations such as cancer in their families may seek information from a variety of sources to gain knowledge about cancer risk and reduce uncertainty. We describe and assess the relative importance of information sources about familial breast cancer at the individual, family, and healthcare provider levels influencing women's reporting they had enough information to speak with daughters about breast cancer. This outcome we refer to as being informed about breast cancer.
Sister Study participants, a cohort of women with a family history of breast cancer, were surveyed on family cancer history, family communication, social support, and interactions with healthcare providers (n = 11,766). Adjusted percentages and 95% confidence intervals for being informed about breast cancer versus not being informed were computed for individual-, family-, and provider-level characteristics in three steps using multivariate logistic regression models.
We found 65% of women reported being informed about breast cancer while 35% did not. Having a trusted person with whom to discuss cancer concerns, having a lower versus higher perceived risk of breast cancer, having undergone genetic counseling, and being satisfied with physician discussions about breast cancer in their families were predictors of being informed about breast cancer.
Although acquiring objective risk information, such as through genetic counseling, may contribute to a basic level of understanding, communication with providers and within other trusted relationships appears to be an essential component in women's reporting they had all the information they need to talk with their daughters about breast cancer.
面临复杂和不确定情况的女性,如家族中患有癌症,可能会从各种来源获取信息,以了解癌症风险并降低不确定性。我们描述并评估了个体、家庭和医疗保健提供者层面上影响女性报告其获得足够信息以与女儿谈论乳腺癌的有关家族乳腺癌的信息来源的相对重要性。我们将此结果称为对乳腺癌有足够了解。
姐妹研究参与者是一群有乳腺癌家族史的女性,对其家族癌症史、家庭沟通、社会支持以及与医疗保健提供者的互动情况进行了调查(n=11766)。使用多变量逻辑回归模型分三步计算了个体、家庭和提供者层面特征与对乳腺癌有足够了解与没有足够了解的调整后百分比和 95%置信区间。
我们发现,65%的女性报告对乳腺癌有足够了解,而 35%的女性没有。有一个可以与之讨论癌症问题的可信赖的人、认为自己的乳腺癌风险较低而不是较高、接受过遗传咨询以及对医生在家庭中讨论乳腺癌感到满意是对乳腺癌有足够了解的预测因素。
尽管获取客观风险信息,例如通过遗传咨询,可能有助于获得基本的了解,但与提供者以及其他可信赖的关系进行沟通似乎是女性报告其获得与女儿谈论乳腺癌所需的所有信息的重要组成部分。