Cancer registration needs assessment at a tertiary medical centre in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania.

Q4 Medicine
Leah L Zullig, Charles Muiruri, Amy Abernethy, Bryan J Weiner, John Bartlett, Olola Oneko, S Yousuf Zafar
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Cancer burden is increasing in Africa more than in any other continent, but population-based tracking of cancer incidence is incomplete. Cancer registries can improve understanding of cancer incidence. To assess organizational readiness to sustain registry development, we conducted a survey assessing change efficacy, resource availability and change commitment at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre (KCMC), an academic hospital in Moshi, Tanzania. Fifty-two surveys were returned (80% response rate). There was strong reliability among change efficacy and commitment survey items, with Cronbach's alphas of 0.93 and 0.77, respectively. Clinicians, nurses and administrators conveyed similar responses regarding change efficacy. Clinicians had similar responses for change commitment. Echoing opinion in many low- and middle-income countries, approximately one-third of respondents indicated there were no funds to maintain the registry, and funds were not obtainable. For most resources, respondents felt that resources were sufficient or attainable. Respondents were generally confident and committed to registry implementation. Lessons learned at KCMC may be more broadly relevant.

坦桑尼亚乞力马扎罗市三级医疗中心的癌症登记需要评估。
非洲的癌症负担比任何其他大陆增加得都多,但以人口为基础的癌症发病率跟踪是不完整的。癌症登记可以提高对癌症发病率的了解。为了评估组织维持登记发展的准备情况,我们在坦桑尼亚Moshi的一家学术医院乞力马扎罗山基督教医疗中心(KCMC)进行了一项调查,评估了变革的有效性、资源可用性和变革承诺。共收到52份调查问卷(回复率80%)。变革效能和承诺问卷具有较强的信度,Cronbach’s alpha分别为0.93和0.77。临床医生、护士和行政管理人员对改变的效果有相似的反应。临床医生对变革承诺有类似的反应。与许多低收入和中等收入国家的意见相呼应的是,大约三分之一的答复者表示没有维持登记的资金,也无法获得资金。对于大多数资源,答复者认为资源是足够的或可以获得的。受访者普遍有信心并致力于注册表的实施。在KCMC学到的经验可能更具有广泛的相关性。
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
World health & population
World health & population Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
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