Department of Comprehensive radiation oncology, The University of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Radiology, The University of Tokyo Hospital, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
PLoS One. 2024 May 29;19(5):e0304381. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0304381. eCollection 2024.
Cancer education programs are regularly conducted in schools in Japan. Previous reports on their effectiveness were based on surveys conducted several months after the education. We aimed to evaluate whether cancer education for children influenced their behavioral changes in adulthood. We targeted schools where the Japan Cancer Society has conducted the programs since 2011 and the program participants are older than 21 years currently. Invitations were sent to the participants and controls who graduated one year before or after the participants, and answers were obtained using an online questionnaire. Data were collected on the willingness to undergo cancer screening, sociodemographic characteristics, healthy behaviors, and health literacy. We compared the data from the program participants with those from controls. We requested cooperation from 13 schools; however, only one agreed. The common reason for refusal was privacy concerns. In the all-boys participating school in Tokyo, there was no significant difference in background information between the cancer education (38 participants) and control (55 participants) groups. Multiple linear regression showed that healthcare or welfare education background (β = 0.25, p = 0.01) and health literacy (β = 0.24, p = 0.02) were significant predictors of cancer screening intention, while the presence of cancer education (p = 0.25) was not. Despite severe selection bias, this is the first study to examine the long-term impacts of cancer education. We found no significant impacts on the measured outcome. However, the educational content at that time differed from that of today, and the program's efficacy should not be negated.
日本的学校经常开展癌症教育项目。以往关于其效果的报告都是基于教育结束后几个月进行的调查。我们旨在评估儿童癌症教育是否会影响他们成年后的行为变化。我们的目标是那些自 2011 年以来就有日本癌症协会开展项目的学校,且目前项目参与者的年龄都在 21 岁以上。我们向参与者和比参与者早一年或晚一年毕业的对照组发送了邀请,并通过在线问卷获得了回复。我们收集了关于接受癌症筛查的意愿、社会人口统计学特征、健康行为和健康素养的数据。我们将参与者的数据与对照组的数据进行了比较。我们请求了 13 所学校的合作,但只有一所同意。拒绝的共同原因是隐私问题。在东京的一所全男生参与的学校中,癌症教育组(38 名参与者)和对照组(55 名参与者)在背景信息方面没有显著差异。多元线性回归显示,医疗保健或福利教育背景(β=0.25,p=0.01)和健康素养(β=0.24,p=0.02)是癌症筛查意愿的显著预测因素,而癌症教育的存在(p=0.25)则不是。尽管存在严重的选择偏差,但这是第一项研究癌症教育长期影响的研究。我们没有发现对测量结果有显著影响。然而,当时的教育内容与今天不同,不应否定该项目的效果。