| Literature DB >> 35643491 |
Katharine A Rendle1,2, Doreen Ramogola-Masire3, Barati Monare4, Shannon N Ogden5, Hannah K Toneff1, Chelsea A Saia1, Jocelyn V Wainwright1, Tara M Friebel-Klingner6, Lisa Bazzett-Matabele7, Rohini Bhatia8, Natalie Bonner9, Tlotlo B Ralefala10, Peter Vuylsteke11, Rebecca Luckett12,13, Surbhi Grover14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Delays in screening and timely diagnosis contribute significantly to global disparities in cervical cancer mortality in Botswana and other low- and middle-income countries, particularly those with high rates of HIV. Little is known about the modifiable factors shaping these delays from the perspectives of women themselves and how these perspectives may differ between those living with and without HIV.Entities:
Keywords: Cervical cancer; Early detection; Global health; HIV; Mixed methods study
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35643491 PMCID: PMC9148477 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-022-01777-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.742
Participant knowledge and beliefs
| Total | Characteristics by HIV status | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All (n = 42) | Living without HIV (n = 15) | Living with HIV (n = 27) | ||
| Cervical cancer prevention and screening awareness (% yes) | ||||
| Have you ever heard of cervical cancer? | 41 (98%) | 14 (93%) | 27 (100%) | 0.36 |
| Have you ever heard of cervical cancer screening? | 40 (95%) | 14 (93%) | 26 (96%) | 1 |
| Have you ever heard of a pap smear or a test where the doctor looks at a little piece of your cervix? | 38 (90%) | 11 (73%) | 27 (100%) | |
| Have you ever heard of visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) or the vinegar test? | 22 (52%) | 6 (40%) | 16 (59%) | 0.34 |
| Have you heard of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine? | 15 (36%) | 4 (27%) | 11 (41%) | 0.51 |
| Do you know anyone who has been screened for cervical cancer? | 17 (40%) | 5 (33%) | 12 (44%) | 0.53 |
| Cervical cancer screening and risk knowledge (% correct) | ||||
| Screening tests look for changes on your cervix that indicate you are at risk for cervical cancer (T) | 39 (93%) | 15 (100%) | 24 (89%) | 0.18 |
| Women should get screened for cervical cancer only if they have symptoms (F) | 38 (90%) | 11 (73%) | 27 (100%) | |
| If a woman has abnormal vaginal bleeding…she should see a medical provider to get screened (T) | 42 (100%) | 15 (100%) | 27 (100%) | |
| Cervical cancer can be prevented (T) | 40 (95%) | 14 (93%) | 26 (96%) | 0.67 |
| Screening tests can help prevent cervical cancer (T) | 40 (95%) | 15 (100%) | 25 (93%) | 0.28 |
| There is no treatment for cervical cancer (F) | 29 (69%) | 10 (67%) | 19 (70%) | 0.80 |
| Family planning increases a woman’s risk of cervical cancer (F) | 19 (45%) | 4 (27%) | 15 (56%) | 0.07 |
| Having HIV increases a woman’s risk of cervical cancer (T) | 31 (74%) | 9 (60%) | 22 (81%) | 0.13 |
| Only HIV + women are at risk of getting cervical cancer (F) | 33 (79%) | 11 (73%) | 22 (81%) | 0.54 |
| Women can lower their risk of cervical cancer by washing inside their vagina (F) | 22 (52%) | 4 (27%) | 18 (67%) | |
| Women can lower their risk of cervical cancer by getting a screening test (T) | 41 (98%) | 15 (100%) | 26 (96%) | 0.45 |
| Women can do nothing to prevent cervical cancer because it is fate or God’s will (F) | 31 (74%) | 11 (73%) | 20 (74%) | 0.96 |
| HPV-specific knowledge (% correct) | ||||
| HPV is an infection that can cause cervical cancer (T) | 26 (62%) | 10 (67%) | 16 (59%) | 0.64 |
| HPV is spread by close contact between humans like during sexual intercourse (T) | 24 (57%) | 8 (53%) | 16 (59%) | 0.71 |
| People with an HPV infection will always have vaginal symptoms (F) | 2 (5%) | 1 (7%) | 1 (4%) | 0.67 |
| HIV awareness | ||||
| Have you heard about the disease known as HIV and AIDS? (Y) | 42 (100%) | 15 (100%) | 27 (100%) | |
| Is HIV and AIDS a communicable disease? (Y) | 41 (98%) | 15 (100%) | 26 (96%) | 1 |
| Is HIV the infection that causes AIDS? (Y) | 41 (98%) | 15 (100%) | 26 (96%) | 1 |
| Does AIDS affect the immune system? (Y) | 42 (100%) | 15 (100%) | 27 (100%) | – |
| HIV transmission knowledge (% correct) | ||||
| By sexual intercourse (Y) | 42 (100%) | 15 (100%) | 27 (100%) | – |
| Through witchcraft or other supernatural means (N) | 40 (95%) | 14 (93%) | 26 (96%) | 0.67 |
| From mother to child (Y) | 41 (98%) | 15 (100%) | 26 (96%) | 0.45 |
| By sharing needle or syringe (Y) | 40 (95%) | 14 (93%) | 26 (96%) | 0.67 |
| By blood transfusion (Y) | 35 (83%) | 11 (73%) | 24 (89%) | 0.19 |
| By shaking hands (N) | 36 (86%) | 13 (87%) | 23 (85%) | 0.90 |
| By eating from same plate or drinking from same glass as a person with HIV (N) | 37 (88%) | 13 (87%) | 24 (89%) | 0.83 |
| By wearing the same clothes as a person with HIV (N) | 38 (90%) | 13 (87%) | 25 (93%) | 0.53 |
| By a bite from a mosquito or other insect (N) | 13 (31%) | 3 (20%) | 10 (37%) | 0.25 |
| Through contact with a doctor, dentist, or other health care professional (N) | 32 (76%) | 9 (60%) | 23 (85%) | 0.07 |
| Through a curse (N) | 30 (71%) | 11 (73%) | 19 (70%) | 0.84 |
| As a punishment from God (N) | 35 (83%) | 14 (93%) | 21 (78%) | 0.19 |
| HIV prevention knowledge (% correct) | ||||
| By not sharing needles, syringes, or apparatus to inject drugs, vitamins, hormones, steroids, or medicine (Y) | 39 (93%) | 14 (93%) | 25 (93%) | 0.93 |
| HIV can be prevented by using condoms properly during sexual intercourse (Y) | 41 (98%) | 15 (100%) | 26 (96%) | 0.45 |
| HIV transmission can be avoided by remaining faithful to a single partner (Y) | 42 (100%) | 15 (100%) | 27 (100%) | – |
| HIV transmission can be avoided by having a blood test before marriage (N) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | – |
| HIV can be prevented by avoiding blood transfusions (Y) | 19 (45%) | 8 (53%) | 11 (41%) | 0.43 |
| HIV can be prevented by abstinence (no sex at all) (Y) | 38 (90%) | 15 (100%) | 23 (85%) | 0.12 |
| HIV can be prevented by no casual sex (Y) | 42 (100%) | 15 (100%) | 27 (100%) | – |
| HIV can be prevented by no commercial sex (Y) | 42 (100%) | 15 (100%) | 27 (100%) | – |
| HIV can be prevented by having fewer partners (Y) | 42 (100%) | 15 (100%) | 27 (100%) | – |
| Summed knowledge (higher = more items correct) | ||||
| Cervical cancer screening factors (0–12), mean (SD) | 9.6 (1.8) | 8.9 (1.9) | 10.0 (1.5) | 0.05 |
| HIV transmission factors (0–12), mean (SD) | 10.0 (1.5) | 9.7 (1.5) | 10.1 (1.5) | 0.32 |
| HIV prevention factors (0–9), mean (SD) | 7.3 (0.8) | 7.5 (0.5) | 7.1 (0.9) | 0.20 |
Bold values are statistically significant
Participant sociodemographic and clinical characteristics by HIV status
| Characteristics (n, column %) | Total | Characteristics by HIV status | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All participants (N = 42) | Living without HIV (N = 15) | Living with HIV (N = 27) | ||
| Living with HIV | 27 (64%) | 15 (0%) | 27 (100%) | – |
| Stage at diagnosis | ||||
| IA or IB | 7 (17%) | 0 (0%) | 7 (26%) | |
| IIA or IIB | 23 (55%) | 7 (47%) | 16 (59%) | |
| IIIA or IIIB | 11 (26%) | 7 (47%) | 4 (15%) | |
| Type of treatment | – | |||
| Curative | 42 (100%) | 15 (100%) | 27 (100%) | |
| Age in years, median (IQR) | 51 (44–59) | 64 (54–67) | 45 (42–53) | |
| Owned cell phone | 41 (98%) | 14 (93%) | 27 (100%) | 0.36 |
| Can receive and send text messages | 40 (95%) | 13 (87%) | 27 (100%) | 0.12 |
| Preferred language | 1 | |||
| Setswana | 35 (83%) | 13 (87%) | 22 (81%) | |
| English | 7 (17%) | 2 (13%) | 5 (19%) | |
| Education level | 0.06 | |||
| None/non-formal | 7 (17%) | 4 (27%) | 3 (11%) | |
| Primary | 17 (40%) | 7 (47%) | 10 (37%) | |
| Junior secondary | 10 (24%) | 1 (7%) | 9 (33%) | |
| Senior secondary | 4 (10%) | 0 (0%) | 4 (15%) | |
| Tertiary | 4 (10%) | 3 (20%) | 1 (4%) | |
| Occupation | 0.12 | |||
| Housewife | 25 (60%) | 12 (80%) | 13 (48%) | |
| Employed (by someone) | 15 (36%) | 3 (20%) | 12 (44%) | |
| Self employed | 2 (5%) | 0 (0%) | 2 (7%) | |
| Marital status | ||||
| Single | 31 (74%) | 8 (53%) | 23 (85%) | |
| Married | 8 (19%) | 4 (27%) | 4 (15%) | |
| Widowed | 3 (7%) | 3 (20%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Number of children, mean (IQR) | 3 (2–4) | 3 (2–4) | 3 (2–4) | 0.88 |
| Religion | 1 | |||
| None | 4 (10%) | 1 (7%) | 3 (11%) | |
| Christian | 38 (90%) | 14 (93%) | 24 (89%) | |
| Mode of transport to clinic | ||||
| Own transport | 3 (7%) | 3 (20%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Public transport | 38 (90%) | 12 (80%) | 26 (96%) | |
| Other | 1 (2%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (4%) | |
| Screened at least once prior to the last screen before diagnosis | 1 | |||
| No | 20 (48%) | 7 (47%) | 13 (48%) | |
| Yes | 10 (24%) | 3 (20%) | 7 (26%) | |
| Unknown | 12 (29%) | 5 (33%) | 7 (26%) | |
| Symptoms on last screen before cancer diagnosis | 1 | |||
| Symptoms | 25 (60%) | 8 (53%) | 17 (63%) | |
| No symptoms | 6 (14%) | 2 (13%) | 4 (15%) | |
| Unknown | 11 (26%) | 5 (33%) | 6 (22%) | |
| Days from last screen to diagnosis, median (IQR) | 52.5 (15–176) | 52.5 (15–176) | 47 (9.5–177) | 0.81 |
| Days from last screen to diagnosis, mean (SD) | 222 (442) | 193 (337) | 237 (493) | 0.80 |
Bold values are statistically significant
Participant thematic quotes
| Domain/themes | MPT phase | Exemplary quotes (in addition to those listed in the text) |
|---|---|---|
| Limited awareness of screening as prevention | Appraisal | When you test [the] first time and you are negative it does not mean you it will never be there. You have to keep on going back to test for whether it is there or it is not (Early-50 s, PLWH) According to what I heard; unprotected sex can cause cervical cancer. To prevent it you can consult with the doctors so they can identify whether you have the illness or not and give you treatment such as chemotherapy or radiation (Late-40 s, PLWH) |
| Limited knowledge about HPV | Appraisal | Yes ma’am. I am disappointed to say this. I do not understand about the [HPV] virus…I have not come to know of it (Early-50 s, PLWH) What I have heard is that cervical cancer can be caused by having sex at a younger age...Cervical cancer can be prevented by refraining from sex while still young...I have no idea what causes HPV and how it can be prevented (Early-50 s, PLWH) I would not want to lie to you and say I have heard anything [about what causes cervical cancer]. What I know is while listening to people with cervical cancer, us women, most people thought it was witchcraft (Late-60 s, PLWH) |
| High HIV-related awareness | Appraisal | With HIV I it is an issue I could say is like a national anthem we always hear about on the radio. Every time even on the radio we are taught about it. (Late 60 s, PLWH) HIV is transmitted through unprotected sexual intercourse, having multiple sexual partners, and getting into marriages without getting tested…It is desirable that when realize that children are starting to mature we teach them about HIV transmission and that it can be prevented through protected sex and going for testing. Now we can prevent it through being keen on testing and protecting ourselves. (Early-50 s, PLWH) I have heard that it is caused by having multiple sex partners, sharing needles with HIV positive individuals…It can be prevented by sticking to one partner and avoiding sharing needles. (Early-40 s, PLWH) Yes, ma’am it can be prevented by not having unprotected sexual intercourse. When you have sex you have to use condoms. (Early-40 s, PLWH) |
| Cancer fear and fatalism | Appraisal/help-seeking | I am not someone who visits hospitals regularly [and] hear people speaking ill of [hospital]. As if to say when you go to [the hospital] you are lost. (Late-60 s, PLWH) |
| Help-seeking | [After hearing my diagnosis] my emotions became low, and I would ask myself what the way forward is. What is going to happen in future? Am I going to find that it has become worse? Or at what stage is it going to be in future? (Early-30 s, PLWH) After I was told the results, I became emotionally mixed up. I lost faith. I just saw death in me because we are used to knowing that when you hear that someone has cancer you know that they are going to die. This is what I thought of until I received treatment…that is when I had hope (Late 40 s, PLWOH) | |
| Structural and individual barriers to seeking care | Help seeking | I do not know how to explain those reasons, but I kept on postponing. I couldn’t get leave days from my employer because she complained of my absence in the workplace. In one instance I lost my job because I had to go for check-ups and the employer could not keep up with it (Late-40 s, PLWH) |
| Diagnostic | It is difficult [to get healthcare services] because I have to use public transport. I see that I just have to make a decision and appeal to my children… It is slightly difficult because I have to first tell my children that this is when [my appointment is] and then they would then rush to assist (Early-70 s, PLWOH) | |
| Delays in receipt of results | Diagnostic | But I had tested because I was unwell and was not feeling well. My results were unavailable. I then remained for a while. I continued to feel that my health was deteriorating (Early-60 s, PLWOH) I had spent a long time waiting for results because I had spent years testing for this virus trying to find out what it is whether it is AIDS or it is the cancer… They tested me and the papers disappeared. The result had also disappeared. This and that… I was not receiving the results [of the screening tests]. (Late-60 s, PLWOH) |
| Social and religious sources of support | All phases | I was so scared thinking that was the end of my life…[but] I received very great support from my family and the health providers. (Early-50 s, PLWH) “I was sad but soon told myself, “Nowadays it is better it is no longer like the old days.” … “Nowadays the doctors are here.” My emotions then became better. I became faithful and thought of God. I thought of God that God is here. When they were treating me and put me where they put me, I will accept. But I was saying this to myself while also praying (Late-60 s, PLWOH) |
| System-level support | All phases | I do not experience any difficulty because if I want services, I seek them…. I just go and receive consultation…Because I do not hide. (Late-50 s, PLWOH) “It is very easy [to seek health services] … My health comes first, and it is my main concern” (Late-60 s, PLWOH) |
MPT, model of pathways to treatment; PLWH, person living with HIV; PLWOH, person living without HIV