The perceived ethical appropriateness of messaging on breast cancer screening cessation among older women

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Vivian V. Altiery De Jesus , Mary Catherine Beach , Susan M. Hannum , Sarah E. Gollust , Rebekah Nagler , Mara A. Schonberg , Cynthia Boyd , Craig Evan Pollack , Qian-Li Xue , Nancy L. Schoenborn
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Abstract

Objective

Messaging about breast cancer screening cessation may reduce over-screening by raising awareness of the harms of screening, but in a background of strongly positive beliefs about screening among the public, such messaging may be perceived negatively. We aimed to assess whether older women perceived it to be ethically appropriate for clinicians to share a message that encourages breast cancer screening cessation.

Methods

As part of a large national online survey experiment with women 65+ years, we presented a message (hereafter referred to as primary message) describing the rationales for stopping breast cancer screening (e.g., guideline recommendation, harms of screening) and assessed how ethical women thought it would be for doctors to share this information with patients. We assessed open-ended reactions. We also tested two variations of the primary message with different wordings of the recommendation to consider stopping screening.

Results

Of 683 participants, 75.9 % agreed that the primary message is ethically appropriate for doctors to share with patients., 13.2 % neither agree or disagree, and 10.9 % disagreed. Themes in open-ended responses suggested that the difference in participant response was partly attributed to whether participants perceived the message as informative or persuasive. Comparing across message variations, messages with stronger recommendations to stop screening were perceived to be less ethically appropriate than the primary message.

Conclusions

Most older women perceived that it was ethically appropriate for doctors to share messages aimed at reducing breast cancer over-screening with patients.

Practice Implications

Interventions should be developed to deliver messages to reduce over-screening among older women in practice settings, with evaluations to monitor their response.
老年妇女停止乳腺癌筛查信息传递的伦理适宜性
目的通过宣传停止乳腺癌筛查可以提高人们对筛查危害的认识,从而减少过度筛查,但在公众对筛查抱有强烈积极信念的背景下,这种信息可能会被认为是负面的。我们的目的是评估老年妇女是否认为临床医生分享鼓励停止乳腺癌筛查的信息在伦理上是合适的。方法:作为一项针对65岁以上女性的大型全国性在线调查实验的一部分,我们提出了一条信息(以下称为主要信息),描述了停止乳腺癌筛查的理由(例如,指南建议,筛查的危害),并评估了女性认为医生与患者分享这些信息的道德程度。我们评估了开放式反应。我们还测试了两种主要信息的变体,其建议考虑停止筛查的不同措辞。结果在683名参与者中,75.9% %同意医生与患者分享的主要信息在伦理上是合适的。, 13.2 %既不同意也不反对,10.9 %不同意。开放式回答的主题表明,参与者反应的差异部分归因于参与者是否认为信息是翔实的还是有说服力的。比较不同的信息,强烈建议停止筛选的信息被认为比主要信息更不符合道德规范。结论:大多数老年妇女认为,医生与患者分享旨在减少乳腺癌过度筛查的信息是合乎道德的。实践意义应制定干预措施,以传递信息,减少实践环境中老年妇女的过度筛查,并进行评估以监测她们的反应。
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来源期刊
Patient Education and Counseling
Patient Education and Counseling 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
11.40%
发文量
384
审稿时长
46 days
期刊介绍: Patient Education and Counseling is an interdisciplinary, international journal for patient education and health promotion researchers, managers and clinicians. The journal seeks to explore and elucidate the educational, counseling and communication models in health care. Its aim is to provide a forum for fundamental as well as applied research, and to promote the study of organizational issues involved with the delivery of patient education, counseling, health promotion services and training models in improving communication between providers and patients.
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