| Literature DB >> 29784009 |
Maren Reder1,2, Lau Caspar Thygesen3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of crowd-figure-pictograms on women's numeric knowledge about mammography screening in a three-armed parallel randomised controlled trial.Entities:
Keywords: Crowd-figure-pictograms; Informed choice; Mammography screening; Numeric knowledge
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29784009 PMCID: PMC5963070 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-018-3437-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1CONSORT flow diagram
Demographic characteristics of participants, n (%)
| Control | Numeric | Pictogram | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | |||
| 18–49 | 124 (84.4) | 121 (84.0) | 119 (84.4) |
| 50–70 | 23 (15.6) | 23 (16.0) | 22 (15.6) |
| Role at university | |||
| Undergraduate | 68 (37.4) | 64 (36.8) | 70 (41.2) |
| Postgraduate | 40 (22.0) | 38 (21.8) | 31 (18.2) |
| Staff | 62 (34.1) | 55 (31.6) | 48 (28.2 ) |
| Other | 12 (6.6) | 17 (9.8) | 21 (12.4) |
| Subject area | |||
| Arts and humanities | 23 (14.6) | 23 (14.9) | 37 (24.5) |
| Engineering | 12 (7.6) | 12 (7.8) | 9 (6.0) |
| Medicine, dentistry and health | 59 (37.3) | 54 (35.1) | 45 (29.8) |
| Science | 31 (19.6) | 26 (16.9) | 29 (19.2) |
| Social sciences | 33 (20.9) | 39 (25.3) | 31 (20.5) |
| Country of birth | |||
| UK | 153 (86.4) | 145 (86.8) | 142 (87.7) |
| Europe | 15 (8.5) | 13 (7.8) | 9 (5.6) |
| Non-European/overseas | 9 (5.1) | 9 (5.4) | 11 (6.8) |
| Breast cancer screening within last 5 years | |||
| Yes | 39 (21.3) | 40 (23.0) | 32 (18.8) |
| No | 144 (78.7) | 134 (77.0) | 138 (81.2) |
| Breast cancer diagnosis within family | |||
| Yes | 66 (36.1) | 58 (33.3) | 55 (32.4) |
| No | 117 (63.9) | 116 (66.7) | 115 (67.6) |
Preintervention knowledge
| Question | Answer categories | |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Mammography screening has the following aim | Avoid breast cancer | 1 (0.2) |
|
|
| |
| Treat breast cancer | 1 (0.2) | |
| Don’t know | 6 (1.1) | |
| 2. If the screening result is negative (no abnormality on the X-ray), this means there is definitely no cancer | Correct | 69 (13.1) |
|
|
| |
| Don’t know | 73 (13.8) | |
| 3. Imagine 2000 women are screened regularly for 10 years. How many will experience pain during the screening? | None | 79 (15.0) |
| 1–4 | 28 (5.3) | |
| 5–12 | 23 (4.4) | |
| 13–33 | 36 (6.8) | |
| 34–90 | 60 (11.4) | |
| 91–245 | 66 (12.5) | |
| 246–665 | 63 (11.9) | |
|
|
| |
| Don’t know | 103 (19.5) | |
| 4. Imagine 2000 women are screened regularly for 10 years. How many will experience a false alarm? | None | 4 (0.8) |
| 1–4 | 14 (2.7) | |
| 5–12 | 50 (9.5) | |
| 13–33 | 82 (15.5) | |
| 34–90 | 115 (21.8) | |
|
|
| |
| 246–665 | 40 (7.6) | |
| 666–2000 | 8 (1.5) | |
| Don’t know | 89 (16.9) | |
| 5. Imagine 2000 women are screened regularly for 10 years. How many will become breast cancer patients (confirmed by further examinations)? | None | – |
| 1–4 | 3 (0.6) | |
|
|
| |
| 13–33 | 67 (12.7) | |
| 34–90 | 89 (16.9) | |
| 91–245 | 159 (30.1) | |
| 246–665 | 94 (17.8) | |
| 666–2000 | 6 (1.1) | |
| Don’t know | 88 (16.7) | |
| 6. Imagine 2000 women are screened regularly for 10 years. How many will be treated for breast cancer unnecessarily? | None | 136 (25.8) |
| 1–4 | 89 (16.9) | |
|
|
| |
| 13–33 | 65 (12.3) | |
| 34–90 | 45 (8.5) | |
| 91–245 | 7 (1.3) | |
| 246–665 | 3 (0.6) | |
| 666–2000 | 1 (0.2) | |
| Don’t know | 93 (17.6) | |
| 7. Imagine 2000 women are screened regularly for 10 years. How many will avoid dying from breast cancer? | None | 0 (0.0) |
|
|
| |
| 5–12 | 29 (5.5) | |
| 13–33 | 38 (7.2) | |
| 34–90 | 86 (16.3) | |
| 91–245 | 99 (18.8) | |
| 246–665 | 91 (17.2) | |
| 666–2000 | 66 (12.5) | |
| Don’t know | 104 (19.7) |
Correct answers are italic. n = 528