| Literature DB >> 22008186 |
Catherine McCarey1, David Pirek, Pierre Marie Tebeu, Michel Boulvain, Anderson Sama Doh, Patrick Petignat.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cervical cancer, although largely preventable, remains the most common cause of cancer mortality among women in low-resource countries.The objective of this study was to assess knowledge and awareness of cervical cancer prevention among Cameroonian healthcare workers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22008186 PMCID: PMC3219551 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6874-11-45
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Demographic characteristics of respondents
| Characteristics | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Female | 265 (66) |
| Male | 136 (34) |
| Median (range) | 38 (20-71) |
| < 25 | 70 (17) |
| 26 - 50 | 218 (54) |
| > 50 | 113 (28) |
| Medical students | 71 (18) |
| Nursing-midwifery students | 38 (10) |
| Doctors (GP, Ped, Ob-Gyn)* | 58 (14) |
| Nurse-midwives ** | 234 (58) |
| Never married | 175 (44) |
| Couple (includes free union, divorced, widowed) | 226 (56) |
| None | 136 (34) |
| < 4 | 142 (35) |
| ≥ 4 | 123 (31) |
| Yes | 170 (42) |
| No | 166 (41) |
| Unknown | 65 (17) |
| Had not had a pap smear in the last 5 years | 156 (59) |
*GP: general practitioners; Ped: pediatricians; Ob-gyns: obstetricians/gynecologists (n = 13 (3% of all respondents)).
** Midwives: n = 20 (5% of all respondents)
Knowledge about HPV and vaccination
| Variable | Total correct N (%) | Medical students N (%) | Nursing/Midwifery students N (%) | Doctors N (%) | Nurses/Midwives N (%) | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HPV is identified in > 50% cervical cancers | 242 (60) | 57 (81) | 16 (42) | 47 (81) | 122 (52) | 0.000 |
| HPV is a sexually transmitted disease | 263 (66) | 53 (76) | 22 (58) | 54 (93) | 134 (57) | 0.005 |
| HPV vaccine helps prevent cervical cancer | 177 (44) | 42 (59) | 12 (32) | 41 (71) | 82 (35) | 0.000 |
| Would recommend vaccine* | 157 (89) | 37 (88) | 11 (92) | 37 (90) | 72 (88) | 0.998 |
* Among those who believe that the vaccine can prevent cervical cancer.
Awareness of risk factors, symptoms and screening methods of cervical cancer
| Variable | Total correct N (%) | Medical students N (%) | Nursing/Midwifery students N (%) | Doctors N (%) | Nurses/Midwives N (%) | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge of 4 most important risk factors1 | 231 (58) | 48 (67) | 16 (41) | 52 (90) | 115 (49) | 0.000 |
| Cervical cancer is preceded by treatable dysplasia | 323 (81) | 61 (86) | 21 (54) | 55 (95) | 186 (79) | 0.019 |
| Dysplasia is usually asymptomatic | 174 (43) | 43 (61) | 14 (38) | 46 (79) | 71 (30) | 0.000 |
| The following test may be used for screening: | ||||||
| - Pap test2 | 337 (84) | 58 (82) | 29 (76) | 54 (93) | 196 (84) | 0.777 |
| - HPV test3 | 190 (47) | 28 (39) | 18 (47) | 33 (57) | 111 (47) | 0.480 |
| - VIA4 | 151 (38) | 25 (35) | 8 (21) | 34 (57) | 84 (36) | 0.001 |
1 HPV and HIV infections, multiple sexual partners and partner with multiple partners are the most important factors.
2 Pap: Papanicolaou
3 HPV: Human Papillomavirus
4 VIA: visual inspection with acetic acid