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Implementing Patient-Directed Cancer Education Materials Across Nigeria

As access to cancer care expands in low-income countries, developing tools to educate patients is paramount. We took a picture booklet, which was initially developed by the nonprofit Global Oncology for Malawi and Rwanda, and adapted it for use in Nigeria. The primary goal was to assess acceptabilit...

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Autores principales: Dickerson, James C., Ibeka, Paulette, Inoyo, Itoro, Oke, Olufolarin O., Adewuyi, Sunday A., Barry, Donna, Bello, Abubakar, Fasawe, Olufunke, Garrity, Philip, Habeebu, Muhammad, Huang, Franklin W., Mulema, Vivienne, Nwankwo, Kenneth C., Remen, Danna, Wiwa, Owens, Bhatt, Ami S., Roy, Mohana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Wolters Kluwer Health 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8654433/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34860566
http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/GO.21.00233
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author Dickerson, James C.
Ibeka, Paulette
Inoyo, Itoro
Oke, Olufolarin O.
Adewuyi, Sunday A.
Barry, Donna
Bello, Abubakar
Fasawe, Olufunke
Garrity, Philip
Habeebu, Muhammad
Huang, Franklin W.
Mulema, Vivienne
Nwankwo, Kenneth C.
Remen, Danna
Wiwa, Owens
Bhatt, Ami S.
Roy, Mohana
author_facet Dickerson, James C.
Ibeka, Paulette
Inoyo, Itoro
Oke, Olufolarin O.
Adewuyi, Sunday A.
Barry, Donna
Bello, Abubakar
Fasawe, Olufunke
Garrity, Philip
Habeebu, Muhammad
Huang, Franklin W.
Mulema, Vivienne
Nwankwo, Kenneth C.
Remen, Danna
Wiwa, Owens
Bhatt, Ami S.
Roy, Mohana
author_sort Dickerson, James C.
collection PubMed
description As access to cancer care expands in low-income countries, developing tools to educate patients is paramount. We took a picture booklet, which was initially developed by the nonprofit Global Oncology for Malawi and Rwanda, and adapted it for use in Nigeria. The primary goal was to assess acceptability and provide education. The secondary goals were (1) to describe the collaboration, (2) to assess knowledge gained from the intervention, (3) to assess patient understanding of their therapy intent, and (4) to explore patient's experiences via qualitative analysis. METHODS: We piloted the original English booklet at a single site and requested feedback from patients and providers. The booklet was updated; translated into Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, and Pidgin English; and used at three additional sites. For the three-site cohort, we collected basic demographics, pretest and post-test assessing content in the booklet, and performed a qualitative analysis. RESULTS: The original booklet was widely acceptable and recommended by patients at site one (n = 31) and by providers (N = 26) representing all four sites. In the three-site cohort (n = 103), 94% of patients recommended the booklet. An immediate post-test focusing on when patients should present to care showed a statistically significant improvement in one of the seven questions. Fifty-one percent of the patients (n = 103) knew their treatment intent (curative v palliative). Qualitative analysis highlighted that the patient's thoughts on cancer are dominated by negative associations, although curability and modern therapy are also frequently cited. CONCLUSION: We adapted an educational booklet to a novel context and had it delivered by local partners. The booklet was widely recommended to future patients. The booklet had an impact on patient's knowledge of cancer treatment, potentially allowing for decreased abandonment.
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spelling pubmed-86544332021-12-09 Implementing Patient-Directed Cancer Education Materials Across Nigeria Dickerson, James C. Ibeka, Paulette Inoyo, Itoro Oke, Olufolarin O. Adewuyi, Sunday A. Barry, Donna Bello, Abubakar Fasawe, Olufunke Garrity, Philip Habeebu, Muhammad Huang, Franklin W. Mulema, Vivienne Nwankwo, Kenneth C. Remen, Danna Wiwa, Owens Bhatt, Ami S. Roy, Mohana JCO Glob Oncol ORIGINAL REPORTS As access to cancer care expands in low-income countries, developing tools to educate patients is paramount. We took a picture booklet, which was initially developed by the nonprofit Global Oncology for Malawi and Rwanda, and adapted it for use in Nigeria. The primary goal was to assess acceptability and provide education. The secondary goals were (1) to describe the collaboration, (2) to assess knowledge gained from the intervention, (3) to assess patient understanding of their therapy intent, and (4) to explore patient's experiences via qualitative analysis. METHODS: We piloted the original English booklet at a single site and requested feedback from patients and providers. The booklet was updated; translated into Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, and Pidgin English; and used at three additional sites. For the three-site cohort, we collected basic demographics, pretest and post-test assessing content in the booklet, and performed a qualitative analysis. RESULTS: The original booklet was widely acceptable and recommended by patients at site one (n = 31) and by providers (N = 26) representing all four sites. In the three-site cohort (n = 103), 94% of patients recommended the booklet. An immediate post-test focusing on when patients should present to care showed a statistically significant improvement in one of the seven questions. Fifty-one percent of the patients (n = 103) knew their treatment intent (curative v palliative). Qualitative analysis highlighted that the patient's thoughts on cancer are dominated by negative associations, although curability and modern therapy are also frequently cited. CONCLUSION: We adapted an educational booklet to a novel context and had it delivered by local partners. The booklet was widely recommended to future patients. The booklet had an impact on patient's knowledge of cancer treatment, potentially allowing for decreased abandonment. Wolters Kluwer Health 2021-12-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8654433/ /pubmed/34860566 http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/GO.21.00233 Text en © 2021 by American Society of Clinical Oncology https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
spellingShingle ORIGINAL REPORTS
Dickerson, James C.
Ibeka, Paulette
Inoyo, Itoro
Oke, Olufolarin O.
Adewuyi, Sunday A.
Barry, Donna
Bello, Abubakar
Fasawe, Olufunke
Garrity, Philip
Habeebu, Muhammad
Huang, Franklin W.
Mulema, Vivienne
Nwankwo, Kenneth C.
Remen, Danna
Wiwa, Owens
Bhatt, Ami S.
Roy, Mohana
Implementing Patient-Directed Cancer Education Materials Across Nigeria
title Implementing Patient-Directed Cancer Education Materials Across Nigeria
title_full Implementing Patient-Directed Cancer Education Materials Across Nigeria
title_fullStr Implementing Patient-Directed Cancer Education Materials Across Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Implementing Patient-Directed Cancer Education Materials Across Nigeria
title_short Implementing Patient-Directed Cancer Education Materials Across Nigeria
title_sort implementing patient-directed cancer education materials across nigeria
topic ORIGINAL REPORTS
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8654433/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34860566
http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/GO.21.00233
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