| Literature DB >> 18506178 |
P Fitzpatrick1, A Winston, T Mooney.
Abstract
BreastCheck, the Irish National Breast Screening Programme, screens women aged 50-64. Radiographer recruitment has been a challenge; doubling of numbers is required for full national expansion; to date females are employed. The aim was to document attitudes to male radiographers and effect on return for subsequent screening. In all 85.8% of a random sample of 2000 women recently screened by BreastCheck completed a postal questionnaire. The commonest reaction women felt they would have if there were a male radiographer was embarrassment; significantly greater among those attending a static unit (45.6%) than mobile (38.4%) and in younger women (46%) than older (38.7%). Nine per cent would not have proceeded if the radiographer was male and 9% would only have proceeded if female chaperone present. In all 17.5% (95% CI 15.7-19.4%) agreed that 'If there were male radiographers I would not return for another screening appointment'; 18.3% were unsure. One-quarter agreed 'if I heard there could be male radiographers it would change my opinion of BreastCheck for the worse'. The proportions agreeing with these statements did not vary significantly by screening unit type, age group, area of residence or insurance status. This is the largest published study to date of this important issue; the correct balance between equality and programme performance must be identified.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18506178 PMCID: PMC2410121 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Initial reaction and indication of how one would proceed
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| Embarrassment | 703 (41.0%) | 38.6–43.3% |
| No reaction | 577 (33.6%) | 31.4–35.9% |
| Surprise | 519 (30.3%) | 28.1–32.5% |
| Annoyance | 86 (5.0%) | 4.1–6.2% |
| Anger | 36 (2.1%) | 1.5–2.9% |
| Pleased | 20 (1.2%) | 0.7–1.8% |
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| I would have had my mammogram by the male radiographer but would have preferred a female radiographer or to have a female chaperone with me | 752 (44.9%) | 42.5–47.3% |
| I would have had my mammogram if there was a male radiographer | 627 (37.4%) | 35.1–39.8% |
| I would have had my mammogram performed but only if there was a female chaperone with the male radiographer | 149 (8.9%) | 7.5–10.3% |
| I would have refused to have the mammogram performed if the radiographer was male | 148 (8.8%) | 7.5–10.3% |
Agreement with statements regarding attitudes to screening and radiographer gender
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| I would be equally comfortable with a male radiographer as with a female radiographer for breast screening | 224 (13.4%) | 489 (29.3%) | 348 (20.9%) | 383 (23.0%) | 223 (13.4%) |
| Gender would not matter – the only relevant issue is how good a radiographer is at his/her job | 496 (29.9%) | 544 (32.9%) | 199 (12.0%) | 294 (17.8%) | 123 (7.4%) |
| Having my breast screening performed is more important to me than any concern about the gender of staff dealing with me | 743 (44.6%) | 558 (33.5%) | 144 (8.6%) | 155 (9.3%) | 6 (4.0%) |
| It would be very embarrassing having a male radiographer for breast screening | 280 (17.0%) | 464 (28.1%) | 222 (13.5%) | 449 (27.2%) | 234 (14.2%) |
| If there were male radiographers I would not return to BreastCheck for another screening appointment | 121 (7.5%) | 163 (10.0%) | 298 (18.3%) | 588 (36.1%) | 457 (28.1%) |
| If I heard there could be male radiographers it would change my opinion of BreastCheck for the worse | 160 (9.7%) | 241 (14.7%) | 231 (14.1%) | 594 (36.2%) | 415 (25.3%) |