年轻黑人女性宫颈癌预防行为。

Women's health (London, England) Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-27 DOI:10.1177/17455057251326008
Angela J Johnson, Monica J Johnson, Juinell B Williams, Emma Muscari, Laura Palmo, Michelle Ruiz, Brianna Bush, Lisa C Campbell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在美国,由于人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)的高发病率,HPV清除率慢,以及预防性子宫颈抹片检查和疫苗的接受率低,黑人妇女的宫颈癌(CC)发病率第二高。目的:采用黑人女权主义思想框架,探讨媒体对黑人女性的描述、种族认同和家庭因素如何影响年轻黑人女性的CC预防行为。设计:在东南部一所大型大学注册的黑人女性同意并参与了一项在线混合方法调查,该调查旨在研究CC预防行为的促进因素和障碍。定量项目通过描述性统计进行分析,定性项目通过解释性现象学分析进行主题评估。方法:黑人本科女性完成了一项在线调查,收集了人口统计信息、CC知识、感知电子健康素养和CC预防行为的定量数据。参与者还回答了七个定性项目,探讨了媒体对黑人妇女的描绘、种族认同和家庭因素如何影响他们的CC预防行为。结果:参与者(N = 146)是18-26岁的黑人大学女性,她们主要被认定为顺性别、非西班牙裔/拉丁裔/x和异性恋。大多数参与者自我报告具有较高的电子健康素养(78.1%,n = 114),但显示CC知识不足(90.3%,n = 131)。所有符合年龄条件的参与者在其一生中接受了巴氏涂片检查(n = 6),大多数人至少接受了一剂HPV疫苗(77.5%,n = 86),大多数人报告完成了系列。定性调查结果强调,参与者的压迫经历与自我倡导并存,主要是在医疗环境中。结论:研究结果为为年轻黑人女性服务的护理机构提供了量身定制的文化干预措施,这些干预措施可能会鼓励预防性护理,以减少成年后期CC的患病率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cervical cancer prevention behaviors in young Black women.

Background: In the United States, Black women have the second highest incidence of cervical cancer (CC) due to high incidence of human papillomavirus (HPV), slow HPV clearance rates, and low receipt of preventive pap smears and vaccines.

Objective: A Black Feminist Thought framework was used to examine how the media portrayal of Black women, racial identity, and familial factors impact CC prevention behaviors among young Black women.

Design: Black women enrolled at a large southeastern university consented and participated in an online mixed-methods survey examining facilitators and barriers to CC prevention behaviors. Quantitative items were analyzed via descriptive statistics, and qualitative items were thematically evaluated using an interpretative phenomenological analysis.

Method: Black undergraduate women completed an online survey that collected quantitative data on demographic information, CC knowledge, perceived eHealth literacy, and CC prevention behaviors. Participants also responded to seven qualitative items that explored how the media portrayal of Black women, racial identity, and familial factors impact their CC prevention behaviors.

Results: Participants (N = 146) were Black college women aged 18-26 who primarily identified as cisgender, non-Hispanic/Latine/x, and heterosexual. Most participants self-reported as having high e-Health literacy (78.1%, n = 114) but demonstrated inadequate CC knowledge (90.3%, n = 131). All age-eligible participants received pap smears within their lifetime (n = 6), and most received at least one dose of the HPV vaccine (77.5%, n = 86), with the majority reporting series completion. Qualitative findings highlighted participants experiences of oppression co-existed with self-advocacy, primarily in medical settings.

Conclusion: Results provide insight for culturally tailored interventions in care settings serving young Black women that may encourage preventive care to reduce the prevalence of CC in later adulthood.

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