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Breast cancer awareness and screening practice amongst health personnel and general population of the littoral region of Cameroon

INTRODUCTION: Late diagnosis has been observed as the hallmark of breast cancer in Cameroonian women where over 70% of patients report with either stage III or IV of the disease, with high mortality and dire socioeconomic consequences. The present study was undertaken to assess the awareness of brea...

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Autores principales: Halmata, Mohamadou, Tagne Simo, Richard, Nganwa Kembaou, Grace, Baiguerel, Erika Myriam, Ndopwang, Lydiane C.C., Nwabo Kamdje, Armel Herve, Telefo, Phelix Bruno, Nangue, Charlette, Nchiwan Nukenine, Elias
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8319513/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34345730
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e07534
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author Halmata, Mohamadou
Tagne Simo, Richard
Nganwa Kembaou, Grace
Baiguerel, Erika Myriam
Ndopwang, Lydiane C.C.
Nwabo Kamdje, Armel Herve
Telefo, Phelix Bruno
Nangue, Charlette
Nchiwan Nukenine, Elias
author_facet Halmata, Mohamadou
Tagne Simo, Richard
Nganwa Kembaou, Grace
Baiguerel, Erika Myriam
Ndopwang, Lydiane C.C.
Nwabo Kamdje, Armel Herve
Telefo, Phelix Bruno
Nangue, Charlette
Nchiwan Nukenine, Elias
author_sort Halmata, Mohamadou
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Late diagnosis has been observed as the hallmark of breast cancer in Cameroonian women where over 70% of patients report with either stage III or IV of the disease, with high mortality and dire socioeconomic consequences. The present study was undertaken to assess the awareness of breast cancer, warning signs and screening methods among Health professionals and general population of Douala. METHODS: Participants included in this study were health practitioners and women randomly selected and enrolled in six health facilities in the city of Douala, Littoral Region, Cameroon. A self-administered questionnaire was designed for each group and aimed at assessing their knowledge about breast cancer, warning signs and screening practices. Then, 616 women underwent breast palpation, followed by fine needle aspiration (FNA) when a nodule was found. RESULTS: Out of a total of 737 participants (121 health personnel and 616 women) interviewed, a majority (96.3%) were aware of the disease with the main source of information being the hospital (76.0%), media (47.1%) and vocational training schools (45.4%) for health personnel; medias (39.9%), health professionals (26.1%) and their entourage (21.9%) for the population. Health workforce presented suitable awareness of the risk factors for breast cancer and its clinical signs even though 37.1% of them had misconceptions and myth-based ideas on the origin of the disease. Both the population and health personnel were aware of the possibility of early screening for breast cancer and cited breast self-examination, clinical breast examination and mammography as screening techniques. Nonetheless, screening practice amongst all women is very poor and mainly due to ignorance, high cost of mammography, together with a lack of mastery of the BSE technique and the fear of actually discovering signs of the disease. CONCLUSION: Our findings show lack of awareness and low practice of breast cancer screening amongst women in Douala and highlight the need to raise awareness and provide the right information to the public for early detection of breast cancer.
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spelling pubmed-83195132021-08-02 Breast cancer awareness and screening practice amongst health personnel and general population of the littoral region of Cameroon Halmata, Mohamadou Tagne Simo, Richard Nganwa Kembaou, Grace Baiguerel, Erika Myriam Ndopwang, Lydiane C.C. Nwabo Kamdje, Armel Herve Telefo, Phelix Bruno Nangue, Charlette Nchiwan Nukenine, Elias Heliyon Research Article INTRODUCTION: Late diagnosis has been observed as the hallmark of breast cancer in Cameroonian women where over 70% of patients report with either stage III or IV of the disease, with high mortality and dire socioeconomic consequences. The present study was undertaken to assess the awareness of breast cancer, warning signs and screening methods among Health professionals and general population of Douala. METHODS: Participants included in this study were health practitioners and women randomly selected and enrolled in six health facilities in the city of Douala, Littoral Region, Cameroon. A self-administered questionnaire was designed for each group and aimed at assessing their knowledge about breast cancer, warning signs and screening practices. Then, 616 women underwent breast palpation, followed by fine needle aspiration (FNA) when a nodule was found. RESULTS: Out of a total of 737 participants (121 health personnel and 616 women) interviewed, a majority (96.3%) were aware of the disease with the main source of information being the hospital (76.0%), media (47.1%) and vocational training schools (45.4%) for health personnel; medias (39.9%), health professionals (26.1%) and their entourage (21.9%) for the population. Health workforce presented suitable awareness of the risk factors for breast cancer and its clinical signs even though 37.1% of them had misconceptions and myth-based ideas on the origin of the disease. Both the population and health personnel were aware of the possibility of early screening for breast cancer and cited breast self-examination, clinical breast examination and mammography as screening techniques. Nonetheless, screening practice amongst all women is very poor and mainly due to ignorance, high cost of mammography, together with a lack of mastery of the BSE technique and the fear of actually discovering signs of the disease. CONCLUSION: Our findings show lack of awareness and low practice of breast cancer screening amongst women in Douala and highlight the need to raise awareness and provide the right information to the public for early detection of breast cancer. Elsevier 2021-07-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8319513/ /pubmed/34345730 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e07534 Text en © 2021 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Halmata, Mohamadou
Tagne Simo, Richard
Nganwa Kembaou, Grace
Baiguerel, Erika Myriam
Ndopwang, Lydiane C.C.
Nwabo Kamdje, Armel Herve
Telefo, Phelix Bruno
Nangue, Charlette
Nchiwan Nukenine, Elias
Breast cancer awareness and screening practice amongst health personnel and general population of the littoral region of Cameroon
title Breast cancer awareness and screening practice amongst health personnel and general population of the littoral region of Cameroon
title_full Breast cancer awareness and screening practice amongst health personnel and general population of the littoral region of Cameroon
title_fullStr Breast cancer awareness and screening practice amongst health personnel and general population of the littoral region of Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Breast cancer awareness and screening practice amongst health personnel and general population of the littoral region of Cameroon
title_short Breast cancer awareness and screening practice amongst health personnel and general population of the littoral region of Cameroon
title_sort breast cancer awareness and screening practice amongst health personnel and general population of the littoral region of cameroon
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8319513/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34345730
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e07534
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