Cultural shifts: an examination of cervical cancer stigma across age groups in the Caribbean.

IF 3.4 Q2 ONCOLOGY
Gaole Song, Kamilah Thomas-Purcell, Diadrey-Anne Sealy, Althea Bailey, Camille Ragin, Kimlin Ashing
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Cervical cancer-related stigma is common but understudied in the Caribbean. This study aims to describe the age difference of cervical cancer stigma and to evaluate the influence on the prevention practices among the Caribbean nonpatient population in Jamaica, Grenada, and Trinidad and Tobago.

Methods: A cross-sectional study involving 1209 participants was conducted using a culturally trans-created Cancer Stigma Scale for the Caribbean context and supplemented with questions on cervical cancer and human papillomavirus (HPV) and HPV vaccine knowledge and beliefs. Descriptive analyses and χ2 tests were conducted.

Results: The χ2 tests showed age is statistically significantly related to participants' response to stigma items such as "community members believe cervical cancer is viewed as shameful" (P = .0001); "women with cervical cancer are treated with less respect than usual by others" (P < .0001); "women with cervical cancer are rejected by family members" (P = .0007); "women with cervical cancer are rejected by intimate partners" (P < .0001); and "intimate partners blame women for having cervical cancer" (P = .0032). Additionally, age has statistically significant associations with endorsements of negative views of cervical cancer from the community (P < .0001) and family (P < .0001) as key barriers to cervical cancer care (item: "discourage women from seeking and obtaining screening and treatment"). Notably, younger respondents (18-25 years) are more sensitized to the unfair stigma and hold more stigma.

Conclusions: Among Caribbeans, age influences cervical cancer stigma. Younger persons acknowledged greater stigma within families and communities. This study can guide age-informed interventions and programs to reduce stigma and improve cervical cancer screening and care seeking to reduce cervical cancer burden and disparities.

文化转变:加勒比地区各年龄组宫颈癌耻辱化研究。
背景:在加勒比地区,与宫颈癌相关的耻辱感很常见,但研究不足。本研究旨在描述宫颈癌鄙视的年龄差异,并评估其对牙买加、格林纳达、特立尼达和多巴哥等加勒比地区非患者人群预防宫颈癌做法的影响:这项横断面研究涉及 1209 名参与者,采用了针对加勒比海地区文化背景的癌症耻辱感量表,并补充了有关宫颈癌和 HPV/HPV 疫苗知识与信仰的问题。研究人员进行了描述性分析和卡方检验:结果:池方检验表明,年龄与参与者对 "社区成员认为宫颈癌是可耻的"(p = .0001)、"患有宫颈癌的妇女受到的尊重比其他人少"(p= .0001)、"患有宫颈癌的妇女受到的尊重比其他人少"(p = .0001)等污名化项目的反应有显著相关性:在加勒比人中,年龄影响着对宫颈癌的成见。年轻人承认在家庭和社区中的耻辱感更强。这项研究可以指导以年龄为基础的干预措施和计划,以减少耻辱感,改善宫颈癌筛查和护理,从而减轻宫颈癌负担,缩小差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JNCI Cancer Spectrum
JNCI Cancer Spectrum Medicine-Oncology
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
80
审稿时长
18 weeks
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