Mkuu Rahma S, Staras Stephanie A, Chakrabarti Choeeta, Hall Jaclyn, Harvey Idethia, Salloum Ramzi G, Barrow Sable, Ortega Selena, Woodard Jennifer, Seals Kayla, Rawls Audrey, Meduri Yashaswini, Donahoo William T, Goede Dianne L, Shenkman Elizabeth A
Department of Health Outcomes & Biomedical Informatics, University of Florida, 1889 Museum Rd, 7th Floor, Suite 7000, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA.
Department of Anthropology, Florida State University, 909 Antarctic Way, Tallahassee, FL 32304, USA.
J Clin Transl Endocrinol. 2024 Feb 25;35:100331. doi: 10.1016/j.jcte.2024.100331. eCollection 2024 Mar.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) causes 99.7% of cervical cancer cases. Cervical cancer is preventable through early detection via HPV testing. However, the number of women screened for cervical cancer has not increased in the last several years. Lower screening rates among women living in high poverty and social vulnerability areas, Black women, and women with chronic co-morbidities (e.g., type 2 diabetes (T2D)) are associated with their higher cervical cancer mortality rates. When screened, Black women are more likely to be diagnosed at later stages and die from cervical cancer. HPV self-collection decreases barriers to cervical cancer screening and can help lessen disparities among underserved women. This study aimed to examine the acceptability of HPV self-collection among Black women with T2D living in socially vulnerable communities.
Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with 29 Black women with T2D living in communities with high social vulnerability. The Health Belief Model informed the development of the interview guide to gather data on the acceptability of HPV self-collection.
Three main themes aligned with the Health Belief Model were identified: (1) HPV self-collection provides a comfortable alternative to in-clinic HPV testing (perceived benefits); (2) HPV self-collection would result in awareness of current HPV status (health motivation); and (3) Women were concerned about collecting their sample accurately (perceived barriers).
DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION: Black women with T2D living in communities with high social vulnerability identified multiple benefits of cervical cancer screening through HPV self-collection. Women are concerned about their ability to collect these samples correctly. Our findings call for future studies focusing on increasing self-efficacy and skills to collect HPV samples among Black women with chronic conditions like T2D who reside in underserved communities with high social vulnerability.
人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)导致了99.7%的宫颈癌病例。通过HPV检测进行早期筛查,宫颈癌是可预防的。然而,在过去几年中,接受宫颈癌筛查的女性数量并未增加。生活在高贫困和社会脆弱地区的女性、黑人女性以及患有慢性合并症(如2型糖尿病(T2D))的女性筛查率较低,这与她们较高的宫颈癌死亡率相关。在接受筛查时,黑人女性更有可能在晚期被诊断出,并死于宫颈癌。HPV自我采样减少了宫颈癌筛查的障碍,并有助于减少服务不足女性之间的差异。本研究旨在调查生活在社会脆弱社区的患有T2D的黑人女性对HPV自我采样的接受程度。
对29名生活在社会高度脆弱社区的患有T2D的黑人女性进行了定性半结构化访谈。健康信念模型为访谈指南的制定提供了依据,以收集关于HPV自我采样可接受性的数据。
确定了与健康信念模型一致的三个主要主题:(1)HPV自我采样为门诊HPV检测提供了一种舒适的替代方式(感知益处);(2)HPV自我采样将使人们了解当前的HPV状态(健康动机);(3)女性担心能否准确采集样本(感知障碍)。
讨论/结论:生活在社会高度脆弱社区的患有T2D的黑人女性确定了通过HPV自我采样进行宫颈癌筛查的多种益处。女性担心自己正确采集这些样本的能力。我们的研究结果呼吁未来开展研究,重点提高居住在社会高度脆弱的服务不足社区、患有T2D等慢性病的黑人女性采集HPV样本的自我效能感和技能。