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Screening by Clinical Breast Examination in Western Kenya: Who Comes?

PURPOSE: More than 80% of women with breast cancer in Kenya present to medical care with established late-stage disease. We sought to understand why women might not participate in breast cancer screening when it is offered by comparing the views of a cohort of those who attended a screening special...

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Autores principales: Busakhala, Naftali Wisindi, Chite, Fredrick Asirwa, Wachira, Juddy, Naanyu, Violet, Kisuya, Job Wapangana, Keter, Alfred, Mwangi, Ann, Njiru, Evanjeline, Chumba, David, Lumarai, Lugaria, Biwott, Penina, Kiplimo, Ivan, Otieno, Grieven, Kigen, Gabriel, Loehrer, Patrick, Inui, Thomus
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society of Clinical Oncology 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5495450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28717690
http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/JGO.2015.000687
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author Busakhala, Naftali Wisindi
Chite, Fredrick Asirwa
Wachira, Juddy
Naanyu, Violet
Kisuya, Job Wapangana
Keter, Alfred
Mwangi, Ann
Njiru, Evanjeline
Chumba, David
Lumarai, Lugaria
Biwott, Penina
Kiplimo, Ivan
Otieno, Grieven
Kigen, Gabriel
Loehrer, Patrick
Inui, Thomus
author_facet Busakhala, Naftali Wisindi
Chite, Fredrick Asirwa
Wachira, Juddy
Naanyu, Violet
Kisuya, Job Wapangana
Keter, Alfred
Mwangi, Ann
Njiru, Evanjeline
Chumba, David
Lumarai, Lugaria
Biwott, Penina
Kiplimo, Ivan
Otieno, Grieven
Kigen, Gabriel
Loehrer, Patrick
Inui, Thomus
author_sort Busakhala, Naftali Wisindi
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: More than 80% of women with breast cancer in Kenya present to medical care with established late-stage disease. We sought to understand why women might not participate in breast cancer screening when it is offered by comparing the views of a cohort of those who attended a screening special event with those of community controls who did not attend. METHODS: All residents living close to three health centers in western Kenya were invited to participate in screening. Participants (attendees) underwent clinical breast examination by trained physician oncologists. In addition, women who consented were interviewed by using a modified Breast Cancer Awareness Module questionnaire. Nonattendees were interviewed in their homes the following day. RESULTS: A total of 1,511 attendees (1,238 women and 273 men) and 467 nonattendee women participated in the study. Compared with nonattendees, the women attendees were older, more often employed, knew that breast cancer presented as a lump, and were more likely to have previously felt a lump in a breast. In addition, they were more likely to report previously participating in screening activities, were more likely to have performed breast self-examination, and were less concerned about wasting a doctor’s time. Almost all those surveyed (attendees and nonattendees) expressed interest in future breast cancer screening opportunities. CONCLUSION: The women who volunteer for breast cancer screening in western Kenya are more aware of breast cancer than those who do not volunteer. Screening recruitment should seek to close these knowledge gaps to increase participation.
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spelling pubmed-54954502017-07-17 Screening by Clinical Breast Examination in Western Kenya: Who Comes? Busakhala, Naftali Wisindi Chite, Fredrick Asirwa Wachira, Juddy Naanyu, Violet Kisuya, Job Wapangana Keter, Alfred Mwangi, Ann Njiru, Evanjeline Chumba, David Lumarai, Lugaria Biwott, Penina Kiplimo, Ivan Otieno, Grieven Kigen, Gabriel Loehrer, Patrick Inui, Thomus J Glob Oncol Original Reports PURPOSE: More than 80% of women with breast cancer in Kenya present to medical care with established late-stage disease. We sought to understand why women might not participate in breast cancer screening when it is offered by comparing the views of a cohort of those who attended a screening special event with those of community controls who did not attend. METHODS: All residents living close to three health centers in western Kenya were invited to participate in screening. Participants (attendees) underwent clinical breast examination by trained physician oncologists. In addition, women who consented were interviewed by using a modified Breast Cancer Awareness Module questionnaire. Nonattendees were interviewed in their homes the following day. RESULTS: A total of 1,511 attendees (1,238 women and 273 men) and 467 nonattendee women participated in the study. Compared with nonattendees, the women attendees were older, more often employed, knew that breast cancer presented as a lump, and were more likely to have previously felt a lump in a breast. In addition, they were more likely to report previously participating in screening activities, were more likely to have performed breast self-examination, and were less concerned about wasting a doctor’s time. Almost all those surveyed (attendees and nonattendees) expressed interest in future breast cancer screening opportunities. CONCLUSION: The women who volunteer for breast cancer screening in western Kenya are more aware of breast cancer than those who do not volunteer. Screening recruitment should seek to close these knowledge gaps to increase participation. American Society of Clinical Oncology 2016-01-27 /pmc/articles/PMC5495450/ /pubmed/28717690 http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/JGO.2015.000687 Text en © 2016 by American Society of Clinical Oncology http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Reports
Busakhala, Naftali Wisindi
Chite, Fredrick Asirwa
Wachira, Juddy
Naanyu, Violet
Kisuya, Job Wapangana
Keter, Alfred
Mwangi, Ann
Njiru, Evanjeline
Chumba, David
Lumarai, Lugaria
Biwott, Penina
Kiplimo, Ivan
Otieno, Grieven
Kigen, Gabriel
Loehrer, Patrick
Inui, Thomus
Screening by Clinical Breast Examination in Western Kenya: Who Comes?
title Screening by Clinical Breast Examination in Western Kenya: Who Comes?
title_full Screening by Clinical Breast Examination in Western Kenya: Who Comes?
title_fullStr Screening by Clinical Breast Examination in Western Kenya: Who Comes?
title_full_unstemmed Screening by Clinical Breast Examination in Western Kenya: Who Comes?
title_short Screening by Clinical Breast Examination in Western Kenya: Who Comes?
title_sort screening by clinical breast examination in western kenya: who comes?
topic Original Reports
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5495450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28717690
http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/JGO.2015.000687
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