Literature DB >> 33732547

Colorectal cancer screening behaviors.

Selda Tekiner1, Gülsen Ceyhun Peker1, Mine Ceylan Doğan2.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Colorectal cancer screening program compliance in Turkey is around 20-30%. Factors that may affect preventive health behavior, mainly individuals' values, beliefs and attitudes, should be explored. A "Health Belief Model" (HBM) scale was developed in 1950 to explain the insufficient participation of some individuals in screening programs. The scale was adopted for colon cancer in 2002. The validity and reliability study of this scale for the Turkish language was conducted in 2007. In this study we aim to evaluate the health beliefs of relatively young individuals before the age of screening in relation to attitudes to colorectal cancer screening via the Turkish version of the scale.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A questionnaire composed of 14 sociodemographic questions and 33 HBM scale questions were applied to the patients of a Family Medicine outpatient clinic where the majority of the patients are relatively young people. The data was analyzed using the IBM SPSS version 21.0.
RESULTS: A total of 310 subjects at the age of 18 and over were informed about the study. The study was completed with 215 subjects with a participation rate of 69.3%. The average age of the participants was 35.4 ± 12.8 years; 62.8% of them were women; 26.0% were students. 94.4% of the participants did not have a history of colon cancer among their first degree relatives. 58.1% agreed that "A colonoscopy should be done every ten years starting at age 50 to screen for colon cancer." Age, marital status, education and occupation status were found to have an effect on barrier scores. Young participants, singles, and those with a primary and/or secondary school education had statistically significant higher barrier scores. The motivation scores of high school graduates were higher than university graduates. The seriousness scores of men were found to be higher than women.
CONCLUSION: Our study points out that attitudes about preventive health measures are mainly associated with age, gender, education level and marital status. These personal characteristics should be taken into consideration while offering screening programs and preventive health measures to individuals in order to protect against colorectal cancer. It is better to give specific messages according to personal characteristics and specific barriers instead of general messages about conducting screening tests beginning from a young age.
© 2021 Tekiner et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Colorectal cancer; Health belief model; Primary care; Screening

Year:  2021        PMID: 33732547      PMCID: PMC7950188          DOI: 10.7717/peerj.10951

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PeerJ        ISSN: 2167-8359            Impact factor:   2.984


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3.  Socio-psychological factors in the Expanded Health Belief Model and subsequent colorectal cancer screening.

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4.  Colonoscopic findings in first-degree relatives of patients with colorectal cancer: a population-based screening program.

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5.  A prospective cohort study on the relation between meat consumption and the risk of colon cancer.

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6.  Health beliefs of first-degree relatives of individuals with colorectal cancer and participation in health maintenance visits: a population-based survey.

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7.  Obstacles to colorectal cancer screening in Chinese: a study based on the health belief model.

Authors:  Joseph J Y Sung; Susanne Y P Choi; Francis K L Chan; Jessica Y L Ching; Joseph T F Lau; Sian Griffiths
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8.  Reliability and validity of the colorectal cancer screening belief scale in Turkey.

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Review 9.  Systematic review of colorectal cancer screening guidelines for average-risk adults: Summarizing the current global recommendations.

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Review 10.  Public awareness of colorectal cancer screening: knowledge, attitudes, and interventions for increasing screening uptake.

Authors:  Antonio Z Gimeno Garcia; Noemi Hernandez Alvarez Buylla; David Nicolas-Perez; Enrique Quintero
Journal:  ISRN Oncol       Date:  2014-03-05
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