Title of article :
A tailored intervention to promote breast cancer screening among South Asian immigrant women
Author/Authors :
Farah Ahmad، نويسنده , , Jill I. Cameron، نويسنده , , Donna E. Stewart، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
12
From page :
575
To page :
586
Abstract :
This study developed and evaluated a socioculturally tailored intervention to improve knowledge, beliefs and clinical breast examination (CBE) among South Asian (SA) immigrant women. The intervention comprised a series of socioculturally tailored breast-health articles published in Urdu and Hindi community newspapers. A pre- and post-intervention design evaluated the impact of the mailed articles among 74 participants. The mean age of participants was 37 years (SD 9.7) and they had lived 6 years (SD 6.6) in Canada. After the intervention, there was a significant increase in self-reporting ‘ever had’ routine physical checkup (46.4–70.8%; p<0.01) and CBE (33.3–59.7%; p<0.001). Also, the total summed scores of accurate answers to 12 knowledge items increased (3.3–7.0; p<0.001). For constructs of health belief model, participants rated their level of agreement for a number of items on a scale of 1–4 (disagree to agree). After the intervention the following decreased: misperception of low susceptibility to breast cancer among SA immigrant women (3.0–2.4; p<0.001); misperception of short survival after diagnosis (2.7–1.8; p<0.001); and perceived barriers to CBE (2.5–2.1; p<0.001). Self-efficacy to have CBE increased (3.1–3.6; p<0.001). The change scores of five predictor variables were entered in a direct logistic regression to predict the uptake of CBE among participants who never had it prior to the intervention. The model, as a set, was statistically reliable [χ2(5,n=48)=14.2, p<0.01] and explained 35% of variance in the outcome; perceived barriers remained an independently significant predictor. The results support the effectiveness of written socioculturally tailored language-specific health education materials in promoting breast cancer screening within the targeted population. Future research should test the intervention in other vulnerable populations.
Keywords :
health promotion , health belief model , South Asian immigrants , Stages of change , Intervention , breast cancer
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Record number :
602197
Link To Document :
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