| Literature DB >> 30781792 |
Kate A McBride1,2, Catharine A K Fleming3,4, Emma S George5,6, Genevieve Z Steiner7,8, Freya MacMillan9,10.
Abstract
Obesity in Australia is rising rapidly, and is a major public health concern. Obesity increases the risk of breast cancer and worsens associated outcomes, yet breast screening participation rates in Australia are suboptimal and can be lower in higher risk, obese women. This study qualitatively explored barriers to breast screening participation in obese women in Australia. In-depth interviews (n = 29), were conducted with obese women (body mass index ≥ 30) and key health providers. A disconnect between providers' and women's perceptions was found. For women, low knowledge around a heightened need to screen existed, they also reported limited desire to prioritize personal health needs, reluctance to screen due to poor body image and prior negative mammographic experiences due to issues with weight. Providers perceived few issues in screening obese women beyond equipment limitations, and health and safety issues. Overall, weight was a taboo topic among our interviewees, indicating that a lack of discourse around this issue may be putting obese women at increased risk of breast cancer morbidity and mortality. Consideration of breast screening policy in obese women is warranted. Targeted health promotion on increased breast cancer risk in obese women is required as is a need to address body image issues and encourage screening participation.Entities:
Keywords: breast screening; health service utilization; mammograms; obesity
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30781792 PMCID: PMC6407106 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16040534
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Demographic characteristics of obese women and providers.
| Obese Women Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Mean age (range) | 57 (47–75) |
| BMI ≥ 30 | 19 (100%) |
| Screening history yes/no | 10/9 |
Provider characteristics.
| Provider Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Female | 10 (100%) |
| Provider categories | |
| Radiographers/clinical staff | 5 |
| Health promotion/bookings staff from a government-funded breast screening organization | 3 |
| Primary Health Network staff | 1 |
| General practitioner | 1 |
Obese women’s understanding and awareness of screening can affect participation.
| Emerging Theme | Excerpt Number | Excerpt |
|---|---|---|
| Family history | 1.1 | ‘a friend who did breast screening and found that she did have breast cancer and she told my friends about the importance of it’ (Participant 14) * |
| 1.2 | ‘The funny thing is because I’ve got breast cancer in my family, I check myself for breast cancer all the time, but I haven’t had a Pap’s smear in God knows how long, which just sounds stupid because it’s the same, cancer is cancer, but I don’t, I only—I don’t check myself for that’ (Participant 17) | |
| 1.3 | ‘Yeah, I’ve talked about screening with my mother and with other relatives. I’ve got an auntie who had breast cancer and she picked it up by self—through self-examination, but she was 60, had never had a breast screen and so she’s like go and get your boobs checked. Yes, yes, I will, and I’ve just never—it’s just not top of the mind.’ (Participant 2) | |
| Understanding benefits of screening | 1.4 | ‘Yeah, from the—you know, from the public health sort of perspective, so getting in early. It’s important to me like sort of socially but you know, for health of Australians, but also personally obviously, partly because I’m you know, reasonably well-educated so I understand that my weight will—and I’ve had a history of smoking and drinking, so all of those things put together will increase my—and poor exercise history as well, so all of that together says that I absolutely should screen.’ (Participant 1) |
| 1.5 | ‘I wasn’t given any information. I was just like given a piece of paper and sent to a radiology place.’ (Participant 10) | |
| 1.6 | ‘I think there’s still a certain amount of secrecy with it with women, which is why I’ve always discussed it with my daughter and my granddaughter. It’s just another part of your body that’s got to be checked.’ (Participant 3) | |
| Screening influencers | 1.7 | ‘It was highlighted by the deaths of two people that were in—not in my life but Jane McGrath and Rove’s wife. They were the two.’ (Participant 8) |
| 1.8 | ‘So having a GP that was there to say righto, it’s time for you to maybe have a look at this and have a look at that, that was a kind of a good thing for me because, as I said, my life has been choc-a-block of kids and everything like that and work, that I probably would have overlooked it and you know, I’d not have got that leeway, at least until we lost my mum or my mum got sick, and then we were kind of all into everything about it.’ (Participant 8) | |
| 1.9 | ‘I mean there’s a lot of concurrence. A lot of friends don’t enjoy it either. Most of my friends go together. I know a lot of my friends have the thing of going together to get screened so that they do—(a) so that they do it, but also that they can provide each other with support.’ (Participant 1) | |
| 1.10 | ‘It’s my daughter though, because a single mum and she doesn’t have anyone else, so I need to look after my health because I need to be around for a lot longer. She’s only 12.’ (Participant 2) | |
| Lack of priority | 1.11 | I feel—the first thing that jumped into my head when you asked me that question is I need to clean my oven. Well you know, and if I don’t well it’s just inevitable it’ll have to happen at some point, I’ve got to do it, and so it’s like that. But it’s a—it’s not something I like doing at all but I feel like I’ll get into doing it’ (Participant 1) |
| 1.12 | ‘No, not really. No, I’m just lazy. I’m really time poor and so getting around to making the appointment and having you know the screen done. It’s like I’ve got the bowel cancer screen sitting at home waiting to be done. That was mailed to me when I turned 50. I know how important they are, I know people who received it in the mail and then been picked up and it saved their life. I know how important screening is. I’m very time poor and I’m just—I need to get myself organized to get it done.’ (Participant 2) | |
| Fear of pain | 1.13 | ‘The mammogram was extremely painful. I’m a large lady and also have large breasts, and honestly, I felt—not to be gross, but it was like them trying to pop a zit is how it was for my breast…to be honest, it’s put me off having another one, unless I actually find something wrong’ (Participant 19) |
* Participants are from the obese women’s group.
Body image concerns impact on the screening experience for obese women.
| Emerging Theme | Excerpt Number | Excerpt |
|---|---|---|
| Avoidance of screening due to body image concerns | 2.1 | ‘I don’t ever feel good about my body and I’m reminded about that when I have a breast screen’ (Participant 6) |
| 2.2 | ‘So it is a big thing for me to try and get under control and—but it also is something that I kind of—probably if you asked me how’s your life going, I’m sad I’ve lost my mum but that’s only been for three years, but my saddest part of my whole life has been my weight, so it’s been something that’s bothered me all the time.’ (Participant 8) | |
| Being self-conscious exacerbates unpleasant screening | 2.3 | ‘I was saying before, just to experience the whole thing visually, to start hating on yourself about that whilst in pain and there’s somebody that’s not—this is a bad experience’ (Participant 4) |
| 2.4 | ‘There’s also some self-consciousness when you’re overweight, actually—to be honest, actually watching your breasts squashed under a plate is—it’s about the last thing I’d choose to do (Participant 1) | |
| 2.5 | It didn’t stop me going. Certainly, no one want to take of their clothes and get squeezed in between some cold metal plates and stand in an awkward position but it didn’t stop me from going. It wasn’t the nicest experience, but it was something that you just have to do’ (Participant 17) | |
| Radiographer sensitivity | 2.6 | Yeah, a person handling, manhandling your breasts into place, … not every practitioner that I’ve met, not every mammographic that I’ve met had that, had that sensitivity…one of them…I actually thought about making a complaint, and then I thought look, there’s not really any complaint that I can make. He needs to get my breast onto the plate. You know, the fact that he’s just acting like a bit of a pig is off but it’s not enough to actually—you know, to put a complaint in anywhere. But certainly, you know, the sensitivity for what it might be like for women who don’t feel—like I say, women who don’t feel okay about their body (Participant 1) |
| 2.7 | ‘No, no, no, they’re all very pleasant. I mean it’s not a nice thing to have done, but all the women I’ve ever dealt with have been very pleasant, very amiable, never made you feel embarrassed.’ (Participant 3) | |
| 2.8 | ‘my more recent encounters are more positive, that it’s really great you’re here… That was all very positive and thanks for coming and participating. It’s just been a much more in positive encounter’ (Participant 18) |
Negative experiences for obese women during screening act as a deterrent to future screening.
| Emerging Theme | Excerpt Number | Excerpt |
|---|---|---|
| Negative physical and psychological events | 3.1 | ‘I’ve spoken to a couple of friends of mine who also have had mammograms and especially the bigger-breasted women, they say they have the same problem. It’s very uncomfortable for them. And not just the bigger-breasted but the bigger in size too because they want you to get your chest so close to the plate, but if you’re overweight like I am, sometimes it’s very hard to actually get your body there.’ (Participant 19) |
| 3.2 | ‘If I can say something else, I hadn’t actually imagined that I’d be sort of hoisted left, right and center to get my breast onto the plate, and so again that can trigger off my you know, past experiences being the sexual assault and so it can actually trigger off unwanted contact in the past because it is actually somebody—I would never have a male mammographer again, not that I had an issue with it on the way in, he was such a jerk that it put me off for good.’ (Participant 1) | |
| Perceived impact on the radiographer | 3.3 | ‘No, no, not really. I think—no. I think that you—in my head I just accept the fact that you know, I’m one of the fat ones, that’s all, but then I give them a lot more to work with, so they’re really pushed to the edge. I make sure they can do it properly. Anyone can get a little boob in there. You try and get this big one in.’ (Participant 8) |
| Positive experiences | 3.4 | ‘No, no, no, they’re all very pleasant. I mean it’s not a nice thing to have done, but all the women I’ve ever dealt with have been very pleasant, very amiable, never made you feel embarrassed.’ (Participant 3) |
Provider reported experiences with obese screeners.
| Emerging Theme | Excerpt Number | Excerpt |
|---|---|---|
| Patient size impacts on mammogram efficiency and safety | 4.1 | ‘Yeah, so there’s one unit that has limitations… the compression has to come down to a certain point if we can take the image, so if the lady’s got quite large you know, voluptuous breasts, then that compression can’t come down enough to be able to enable the exposure. So yeah, I’ve had to on occasions just say look, I can’t do it, or if it’s sort of—if they’re borderline then I’ll say okay, next time maybe go to RPA because this is what’s happened today, and to avoid that next time just go to a different site.’ (Provider 3) |
| 4.2 | ‘We do have trouble, we have only trouble positioning them, bringing them forward to the detector is when they have very protruding stomach. That’s where the problem is so they aren’t able to really lean forward, especially when we go into the different view, and then we have to get the angle at the bottom here and then the tummy’s in there, so that’s when we find it really difficult to position them and get a good radiograph, yeah.’ (Provider 6) | |
| 4.3 | ‘So, we split it up, so we just look at the top part of the breast and let the tummy be there, and then we turn the angle a bit and position a little bit different to get the lower part of the breast, yeah.’ (Provider 6) | |
| 4.4 | And as well as—they usually have very thin skin underneath and sometimes when—just when you pull it splits, the skin splits, and so that is one difficulty. So, it’s sometimes very difficult to carry on and we have to just stop the procedure and get them to come on another day because it gets painful, so that’s another thing we come across as well, yeah.’ (Provider 5) | |
| 4.5 | ‘Technically it’s difficult. Sometimes when they’re obese they’re short of breath as well, so we have to get them to sit in between views, yeah, that too.’ (Provider 5) | |
| Obese patients cannot use mobile screening vans | 4.6 | ‘No, I think it would just be in terms of the van, yeah. Our old van obviously when I had that issue with that lady, you know the new vans are slightly bigger, but I do think with the van the waiting room is quite small, the change room is very small, and the walkway I think if….They’re very small…..Yeah, so the walkway to get into the mammo room, for an obese lady I think it would be very difficult.’ (Provider 7) |
| Work health and safety | 4.7 | ‘You just have to break it up, take your time, be conscious of how you’re moving. Often—because the breast can be quite heavy, so you’ve just got to be conscious of your movements so that you don’t injure yourself. I’m very, very much aware of that.’ (Provider 2) |
| Quality images can take priority over patient considerations | 4.8 | So just like speaking with—reassuring the that you know, I meet a lot of women and it’s not something I actually pay attention to, it’s just —it’s all about getting a good picture, making sure they don’t have to come back for extra views that are technically unsatisfactory, all of that.’ (Provider 3) |
| 4.9 | ‘And you know, for the first timers you know, you’re a little bit more lenient and just guide them through the compression a little bit more. And you know, the whole point again, the training comes in, how to handle patients, how to make sure that you get adequate compression to get good quality images comes into play and then you know, doing the procedure quickly.’ (Provider 5) |
Providers do not see obesity as a barrier to breast screening.
| Emerging Theme | Excerpt Number | Excerpt |
|---|---|---|
| Weight is not barrier to screening | 5.1 | ‘Well no, not really. Now I mean we get you know, concerns from all sorts of women, skinny women, larger women. Yeah, that’s not one particular you know, concern that sticks in my mind and as I said you know, I’ve never really had anyone say to me they don’t want to come in because they’re obese’ (Provider 7) |
| 5.2 | ‘I have never—yeah, I’ve never encountered for example an obese woman saying that’s the specific reason why she’s not coming back, for example.’ (Provider 4) | |
| 5.3 | ‘Look, I honestly don’t think that someone who’s overweight would be more apprehensive, except if they’d previously had a bad experience somewhere having a mammogram due to their weight problem, and so—but that’s no different in some ways to a client who has no breast tissue at all, and it’s extremely difficult for them as well. So, I really wouldn’t say that there’s any one category that’s more apprehensive unless it’s due to a mental condition. I would say that obviously there are some clients who are developmentally delayed who through that condition are extremely overweight, so you have that combination.’ (Provider 3) | |
| Other perceived barriers | 5.7 | ‘Cultural barriers as well because we’ve got a lot of different cultures. Arabic women you know, are often very reluctant to screen.’ (Provider 3) |
| 5.8 | ‘Yeah, I think it’s just you know, just education, more education that’s needed a lot of the time.’ (Provider 1) | |
| Misconceptions of the impact of weight | 5.9 | ‘It’s always a taboo subject, weight, isn’t it…? Maybe they think they’re judged because they are fat because—also overweight because maybe they think society might think that that’s not acceptable.’ (Provider 8) |