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Development and assessment of an evidence-based prostate cancer intervention programme for black men: the W.O.R.D. on prostate cancer video

In spite of the numerous prostate cancer (CaP) intervention programmes that have been implemented to address the disparities experienced by black men, CaP prevention, risk reduction, and early detection behaviours remain low among black men. The lack of formal theoretical frameworks to guide the dev...

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Autores principales: Odedina, Folakemi, Oluwayemisi, Awoyemi O, Pressey, Shannon, Gaddy, Samuel, Egensteiner, Eva, Ojewale, Ezekiel O, Moline, Olivia Myra, Martin, Chloe Marie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cancer Intelligence 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4154942/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25228916
http://dx.doi.org/10.3332/ecancer.2014.460
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author Odedina, Folakemi
Oluwayemisi, Awoyemi O
Pressey, Shannon
Gaddy, Samuel
Egensteiner, Eva
Ojewale, Ezekiel O
Moline, Olivia Myra
Martin, Chloe Marie
author_facet Odedina, Folakemi
Oluwayemisi, Awoyemi O
Pressey, Shannon
Gaddy, Samuel
Egensteiner, Eva
Ojewale, Ezekiel O
Moline, Olivia Myra
Martin, Chloe Marie
author_sort Odedina, Folakemi
collection PubMed
description In spite of the numerous prostate cancer (CaP) intervention programmes that have been implemented to address the disparities experienced by black men, CaP prevention, risk reduction, and early detection behaviours remain low among black men. The lack of formal theoretical frameworks to guide the development and implementation of interventions has been recognised as one of the primary reasons for the failure of health interventions. Members of the Florida Prostate Cancer Health Disparity (CaPHD) group employed the Personal Model of Prostate Cancer Disparity (PIPCaD) model and the Health Communication Process Model to plan, implement, and evaluate an intervention programme, the ‘Working through Outreach to Reduce Disparity (W.O.R.D. on Prostate Cancer)’ video for black men. The location for the video was in a barbershop, a popular setting for the targeted group. The video starred CaP survivors, CaP advocates, a radio personality, and barbers. In addition, remarks were provided by a CaP scientist, a urologist, a CaP advocate, a former legislator, and a minister. The W.O.R.D. video was developed to assist black men in meeting the Healthy People 2020 goal for the United States of America. The efficacy of the W.O.R.D. video was successfully established among 143 black men in Florida. Exposure to the video was found to statistically increase CaP knowledge and intention to participate in CaP screening. Furthermore, exposure to the video statistically decreased participants’ perception of the number of factors contributing to decision, uncertainty about CaP screening. Participants were highly satisfied with the video content and rated the quality of the video to be very good. Participants also rated the video as credible, informative, useful, relevant, understandable, not too time consuming, clear, and interesting.
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spelling pubmed-41549422014-09-16 Development and assessment of an evidence-based prostate cancer intervention programme for black men: the W.O.R.D. on prostate cancer video Odedina, Folakemi Oluwayemisi, Awoyemi O Pressey, Shannon Gaddy, Samuel Egensteiner, Eva Ojewale, Ezekiel O Moline, Olivia Myra Martin, Chloe Marie Ecancermedicalscience Review In spite of the numerous prostate cancer (CaP) intervention programmes that have been implemented to address the disparities experienced by black men, CaP prevention, risk reduction, and early detection behaviours remain low among black men. The lack of formal theoretical frameworks to guide the development and implementation of interventions has been recognised as one of the primary reasons for the failure of health interventions. Members of the Florida Prostate Cancer Health Disparity (CaPHD) group employed the Personal Model of Prostate Cancer Disparity (PIPCaD) model and the Health Communication Process Model to plan, implement, and evaluate an intervention programme, the ‘Working through Outreach to Reduce Disparity (W.O.R.D. on Prostate Cancer)’ video for black men. The location for the video was in a barbershop, a popular setting for the targeted group. The video starred CaP survivors, CaP advocates, a radio personality, and barbers. In addition, remarks were provided by a CaP scientist, a urologist, a CaP advocate, a former legislator, and a minister. The W.O.R.D. video was developed to assist black men in meeting the Healthy People 2020 goal for the United States of America. The efficacy of the W.O.R.D. video was successfully established among 143 black men in Florida. Exposure to the video was found to statistically increase CaP knowledge and intention to participate in CaP screening. Furthermore, exposure to the video statistically decreased participants’ perception of the number of factors contributing to decision, uncertainty about CaP screening. Participants were highly satisfied with the video content and rated the quality of the video to be very good. Participants also rated the video as credible, informative, useful, relevant, understandable, not too time consuming, clear, and interesting. Cancer Intelligence 2014-08-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4154942/ /pubmed/25228916 http://dx.doi.org/10.3332/ecancer.2014.460 Text en © the authors; licensee ecancermedicalscience. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Odedina, Folakemi
Oluwayemisi, Awoyemi O
Pressey, Shannon
Gaddy, Samuel
Egensteiner, Eva
Ojewale, Ezekiel O
Moline, Olivia Myra
Martin, Chloe Marie
Development and assessment of an evidence-based prostate cancer intervention programme for black men: the W.O.R.D. on prostate cancer video
title Development and assessment of an evidence-based prostate cancer intervention programme for black men: the W.O.R.D. on prostate cancer video
title_full Development and assessment of an evidence-based prostate cancer intervention programme for black men: the W.O.R.D. on prostate cancer video
title_fullStr Development and assessment of an evidence-based prostate cancer intervention programme for black men: the W.O.R.D. on prostate cancer video
title_full_unstemmed Development and assessment of an evidence-based prostate cancer intervention programme for black men: the W.O.R.D. on prostate cancer video
title_short Development and assessment of an evidence-based prostate cancer intervention programme for black men: the W.O.R.D. on prostate cancer video
title_sort development and assessment of an evidence-based prostate cancer intervention programme for black men: the w.o.r.d. on prostate cancer video
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4154942/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25228916
http://dx.doi.org/10.3332/ecancer.2014.460
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