| Literature DB >> 26935960 |
Gina S Ogilvie1,2,3, Laurie W Smith4, Dirk van Niekerk5, Fareeza Khurshed6, Heather N Pedersen7, Darlene Taylor8, Katharine Thomson9, Sandra B Greene10, Suzanne M Babich11, Eduardo L Franco12, Andrew J Coldman13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High-risk HPV DNA testing has been proposed as a primary tool for cervical cancer screening (HPV-CCS) as an alternative to the Papanicolaou cytology- method. This study describes factors associated with women's intentions to attend cervical cancer screening if high-risk HPV DNA testing (HPV-CCS) was implemented as a primary screening tool, and if screening were conducted every 4 years starting after age 25.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26935960 PMCID: PMC4776398 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-2865-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Characteristics of scale items
| Screening concepts | Scale items |
|---|---|
| Attitudes to HPV testing every 4 years and after age of 25 | A22. Having an HPV test to screen for cervical cancer every 4 years and after age of 25 instead of a Pap smear every year would be: |
| Subjective Norms: Direct | SND 2: Most people who are important to me would think that I should have an HPV test to screen for cervical cancer instead of a Pap smear |
| Subjective Norms: Indirect | SNI5. My family physician would think that I should have an HPV test to screen for cervical cancer instead of a Pap smear SNI6. What my family physician thinks is important to me SNI7. My friends would think that I should have an HPV test to screen for cervical cancer instead of a Pap smear |
| Role of partners | CP13. If I had a cervical cancer screening result that showed I had an HPV infection, I would feel comfortable sharing the results with my partner(s) |
| Perceived behavioral control [ | PBC15. I am confident that I could have an HPV test to screen for cervical cancer instead of a Pap smear |
Summary of survey responses collected
| Category | Count | Percentage (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Number of invites | 2016 | |
| Number of clicks on survey (received) | 1538 | 100 |
| Number of unique respondents | 1446 | 94.02 |
| Number of respondents who did not submit survey as complete | 191 | 12.42 |
| Number of respondents with duplicated complete surveys | 3 | 0.19 |
| Number of respondents who did not answer all questions | 250 | 16.25 |
| Number of respondents with eligible results | 1094 | 71.13 |
| Number of unique respondents with eligible results | 1094 | 71.13 |
| Number of eligible respondents who answered all short EPI-Q | 981 | 63.78 |
Univariate analysis of demographic factors, risk factors, and scales for intention to attend for HPV-CCS – “I would be willing to have an HPV test to screen for cervical cancer after the age of 25 and every 4 years instead of a Pap smear every year after becoming sexually active”
| Variable | Group | Overall | Agree | Disagree |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | N(%) | 981(100 %) | 504(51.4 %) | 477(48.6 %) | |
| Marital Status | Divorced | 108(11.0 %) | 54(10.7 %) | 54(11.3 %) | 0.46 |
| Common law/married | 689(70.2 %) | 363(72.0 %) | 326(68.3 %) | ||
| Never married | 112(11.4 %) | 53(10.5 %) | 59(12.4 %) | ||
| Widowed | 7(0.7 %) | 5(1.0 %) | 2(0.4 %) | ||
| Missing | 65(6.6 %) | 29(5.8 %) | 36(7.5 %) | ||
| Education | High school or less | 133(13.6 %) | 54(10.7 %) | 79(16.6 %) | 0.007 |
| More than high school | 848(86.4 %) | 450(89.3 %) | 398(83.4 %) | ||
| Sexual Partners - Ever | 0 | 1(0.1 %) | 1(0.2 %) | 0 | 0.42 |
| 1 | 185(18.9 %) | 96(19.0 %) | 89(18.7 %) | ||
| 2–5 | 364(37.1 %) | 193(38.3 %) | 171(35.8 %) | ||
| 6–10 | 221(22.5 %) | 110(21.8 %) | 111(23.3 %) | ||
| 11–50 | 198(20.2 %) | 101(20.0 %) | 97(20.3 %) | ||
| >50 | 12(1.2 %) | 3(0.6 %) | 9(1.9 %) | ||
| Ethnic Origin | Chinese | 81(8.3 %) | 37(7.3 %) | 44(9.2 %) | 0.47 |
| Aboriginal | 24(2.4 %) | 11(2.2 %) | 13(2.7 %) | ||
| Other | 876(89.3 %) | 456(90.5 %) | 420(88.1 %) | ||
| Smoke, Ever | No | 627(63.9 %) | 331(65.7 %) | 296(62.1 %) | 0.24 |
| Yes | 354(36.1 %) | 173(34.3 %) | 181(37.9 %) | ||
| Age, Recruitment | Median(IQR) | 45(38–53) | 45(38–54) | 44(38–51) | 0.07 |
| Attitudes to HPV testing (A1) | Mean score (SD) | 19.5(7.1) | 23.6(5.1) | 15.2(6.3) | <0.001 |
| Subjective Norms, Direct (SND2-3) | Mean score (SD) | 11.0(2.6) | 11.5(2.5) | 10.5(2.6) | <0.001 |
| Subjective Norms, Indirect (SNI5-12) | Mean score (SD) | 34.8(31.9) | 42.2(30.2) | 27.0(31.9) | <0.001 |
| Perceived Behavioural Control (PBC15-18) | Mean score (SD) | 23.4(4.1) | 24.2(3.8) | 22.6(4.3) | <0.001 |
| Contacting Partners (CP13-14) | Mean score (SD) | 12.6(2.2) | 12.7(2.2) | 12.5(2.3) | 0.33 |
a based on either chi-square or Kruskal-Wallis test as appropriate on valid data only
Adjusted odds ratio estimatesa for factors associated with intention to attend for HPV-CCS
| Dependent variable | Independent variables | Adjusted OR | 95 % CI |
|---|---|---|---|
| “I would be willing to have an HPV test to screen for cervical cancer after the age of 25 and every 4 years instead of a Pap smear every year after becoming sexually active” | Attitudes to HPV testing every 4 years after the age of 25 (A22) | 1.26 | (1.23, 1.30) |
| Perceived Behavioural Control (PBC15-18) | 1.06 | (1.02, 1.10) | |
| Education | 0.59 | (0.37, 0.93) |
a Stepwise logistic regression was used to select final variables from full multivariable model (variables with p value ≤0.2 in univariate analysis were considered for multivariable model)