Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, NY, 10461, USA.
Clinical Research Education, Networking and Consultancy, Yaoundé, Cameroon.
BMC Womens Health. 2021 Feb 18;21(1):74. doi: 10.1186/s12905-021-01211-w.
Cervical cancer is a leading cause of death among Cameroon women. The burden of cervical cancer is in part traceable to the inadequate understanding of socio-contextual determinants of access to screening and prevention opportunities. We explored multilevel individual, community and structural factors that facilitate or inhibit cervical cancer prevention in women at risk in a low-income, high HIV prevalence context.
We utilized an exploratory qualitative approach to obtain data through focus group discussions and in-depth interviews from May to August, 2018. A two-stage purposive sampling strategy was used to select 80 women and 20 men who participated in 8 focus group discussions and 8 in-depth interviews. The socio-ecological model guided data analyses to identify micro-, meso-, and macro-level determinants of cervical cancer screening.
Micro-level factors including lack of awareness and knowledge about cervical cancer, lack of access to information, excessive cost of cervical cancer screening, low risk perceptions, and poor health seeking behaviors were major barriers for women seeking cervical cancer screening. Meso-level factors, such as social networks, socio-cultural norms, perceptions of the role of men and HIV-related stigma when screening is integrated into HIV care, also engender negative attitudes and behaviors. Macro-level barriers to cervical cancer screening included poorly equipped health facilities and a lack of national cancer prevention policies and programs.
In the context of the call for elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem, our findings highlight challenges and opportunities that should be considered when implementing interventions to increase uptake of cervical cancer screening in low-middle income settings.
宫颈癌是导致喀麦隆女性死亡的主要原因之一。宫颈癌的负担部分可以追溯到对获得筛查和预防机会的社会文化决定因素的理解不足。我们探讨了在低收入、高 HIV 流行地区,有利于或阻碍高危妇女进行宫颈癌预防的多层次个人、社区和结构因素。
我们采用探索性定性方法,于 2018 年 5 月至 8 月通过焦点小组讨论和深入访谈获取数据。采用两阶段的目的抽样策略,选择 80 名妇女和 20 名男子参加 8 个焦点小组讨论和 8 个深入访谈。社会生态模型指导数据分析,以确定宫颈癌筛查的微观、中观和宏观决定因素。
微观层面的因素包括缺乏对宫颈癌的认识和了解、缺乏信息获取途径、宫颈癌筛查费用过高、风险认知度低以及不良的就医行为,这些都是妇女寻求宫颈癌筛查的主要障碍。中观层面的因素,如社交网络、社会文化规范、对男性角色的看法以及将筛查纳入 HIV 护理时与 HIV 相关的耻辱感,也会产生负面的态度和行为。宫颈癌筛查的宏观层面障碍包括设备简陋的卫生机构以及缺乏国家癌症预防政策和计划。
在呼吁消除宫颈癌作为公共卫生问题的背景下,我们的研究结果强调了在中低收入环境中实施干预措施以增加宫颈癌筛查率时应考虑的挑战和机遇。