| Literature DB >> 27473593 |
Lindsay C Kobayashi1, Jo Waller2, Christian von Wagner1, Jane Wardle1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The NHS Cancer Screening Programmes in England now operate a policy of 'informed choice' about participation in cancer screening. Engagement with written information about screening is important to facilitate informed choice, although the degree to which the screening-eligible public engages with the available information is unknown. We examined the association between reading of the standard informational booklet ('Bowel Cancer Screening: The Facts') and participation in the nationally organised NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme in England.Entities:
Keywords: Colorectal cancer screening; Decision making; England; Faecal occult blood test; Population screening; Public education; Survey
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27473593 PMCID: PMC4966703 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3374-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Characteristics of the sample, England, 2014, n = 1307
| Characteristic | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Age | |
| 60-65 | 681 (52 %) |
| 66-70 | 626 (48 %) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 664 (51 %) |
| Female | 643 (49 %) |
| Ethnicity | |
| White | 1249 (96 %) |
| Non-white | 58 (4 %) |
| Educational attainment | |
| Degree level or higher | 252 (19 %) |
| School level | 581 (44 %) |
| No formal qualifications | 416 (32 %) |
| Missing | 58 (4 %) |
| Social grade | |
| A/B (upper/middle class) | 332 (25 %) |
| C1 (lower middle class) | 289 (22 %) |
| C2 (skilled working class) | 240 (18 %) |
| D (working class) | 151 (12 %) |
| E (non-working/unemployed) | 295 (23 %) |
| Amount read of ‘ | |
| None | 287 (22 %) |
| A little | 42 (3 %) |
| Some of it | 85 (7 %) |
| Most of it | 116 (9 %) |
| Almost all of it | 97 (7 %) |
| Almost all of it | 680 (52 %) |
| Screening uptake status | |
| ‘Ever’ | 908 (69 %) |
| ‘Never’ | 399 (31 %) |
Associations between FOBt screening uptake, sociodemographic characteristics, and having read the standard information booklet about FOBt screening, England, 2014, n = 1307
| Read none of ' | Adjusted OR* (95 % CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| FOBt screening uptake status | ||
| ‘Ever’ | 36 (4 %) | 1.00 (ref) |
| ‘Never’ | 251 (63 %) | 39.0 (26.2, 58.1) |
| Age | ||
| 60-65 | 171 (25 %) | 1.00 (ref) |
| 66-70 | 116 (19 %) | 0.81 (0.56, 1.16) |
| Sex | ||
| Female | 154 (23 %) | 1.00 (ref) |
| Male | 133 (21 %) | 1.34 (0.93, 1.92) |
| Ethnicity | ||
| White | 255 (20 %) | 1.00 (ref) |
| Non-white | 32 (55 %) | 3.47 (1.60, 7.54) |
| Educational attainment | ||
| Degree level or higher | 49 (19 %) | 1.00 (ref) |
| School level | 122 (21 %) | 1.14 (0.67, 1.95) |
| No formal qualifications | 108 (26 %) | 1.50 (0.82, 2.75) |
| Missing | 8 (14 %) | 0.77 (0.26, 2.26) |
| Social grade | ||
| A/B (upper/middle class) | 56 (17 %) | 1.00 (ref) |
| C1 (lower middle class) | 48 (17 %) | 0.83 (0.47, 1.47) |
| C2 (skilled working class) | 50 (21 %) | 1.00 (0.54, 1.85) |
| D (working class) | 44 (29 %) | 1.35 (0.68, 2.67) |
| E (non-working/unemployed) | 89 (30 %) | 1.26 (0.72, 2.23) |
*All variables in the table are mutually adjusted for in the logistic regression model. The ORs are for reading 'none' versus 'a little'/'some'/'most'/'almost all'/'all' of The Facts booklet