Effectiveness of a community-based health education intervention on prostate cancer fatalism: a quasi-experimental study.

IF 0.9 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Pan African Medical Journal Pub Date : 2024-07-18 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.11604/pamj.2024.48.117.34579
Ruth Gathoni Mbugua, Simon Karanja, Sherry Oluchina
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: prostate cancer is categorized as the most common cancer in males in 2020 in Kenya at 21.9%. The major challenge with prostate cancer in Low and Middle-Income Countries is the presentation of patients with advanced disease. The rate of prostate cancer screening is low across African countries which has been associated with low knowledge and fatalistic beliefs. The study aimed to assess the effectiveness of community-based health education on prostate cancer fatalism.

Methods: the study design was quasi-experimental. The study was conducted in Kiambu County in the Gatundu North and Kiambu sub-counties in Kenya. A total of 288 men were selected per arm of the study using stratified random sampling. Data were collected using a structured questionnaire at baseline and post-intervention. The intervention was health education through home visits by a Community Health Worker.

Results: in the study, fatalism was associated with prostate cancer screening (P<0.05). There was a significant decrease in prostate cancer fatalism for the attributes of pessimism, pre-determination, and death inevitability in the intervention arm post-intervention. In contrast, in the control arm, there was no significant decrease. Post-intervention, the proportion of respondents with a high perception of fatalism decreased from 51% to 23.6% (P<0.05) in the intervention arm. In contrast, in the control arm, there was no significant decrease.

Conclusion: prostate cancer fatalism significantly influenced prostate cancer screening. Community-based health education significantly reduced pessimism, death inevitability, and pre-destination beliefs about prostate cancer. Tailored culturally relevant health education is an effective strategy to address fatalistic beliefs.

社区健康教育干预对前列腺癌宿命论的影响:一项准实验研究。
导言:在肯尼亚,前列腺癌被列为 2020 年男性最常见的癌症,占 21.9%。在中低收入国家,前列腺癌的主要挑战是晚期患者的出现。非洲国家的前列腺癌筛查率很低,这与知识水平低和宿命论有关。本研究旨在评估基于社区的健康教育对前列腺癌宿命论的影响。研究在肯尼亚基安布县的加通杜北部和基安布分县进行。研究采用分层随机抽样法,每个研究臂共抽取了 288 名男性。在基线和干预后使用结构化问卷收集数据。结果:在研究中,宿命论与前列腺癌筛查(PC结论:前列腺癌宿命论对前列腺癌筛查有显著影响。基于社区的健康教育大大降低了对前列腺癌的悲观、死亡不可避免和宿命论信念。针对不同文化背景的健康教育是解决宿命论的有效策略。
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来源期刊
Pan African Medical Journal
Pan African Medical Journal PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
691
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