Socio‐cultural influences on Chinese women's attendance for cervical screening
- 18 March 2004
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Advanced Nursing
- Vol. 46 (1) , 42-52
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2648.2003.02964.x
Abstract
Compared with other countries, Hong Kong has a relatively high rate of cervical cancer. Much of this morbidity should be avoidable with cervical screening, but uptake rates for screening in Hong Kong are low. In programmes to promote cervical screening attendance, it is essential that aspects of the socio-cultural system be taken into account to provide appropriate preventive health strategies. This paper outlines an investigation of the cultural and social factors contributing to Chinese women's attendance for cervical screening. A mixed methods design was employed, combining and comparing two data sets. The initial data set was drawn from 10 focus groups involving both screened and unscreened Chinese women (n = 54). The second data set was drawn from a total population of Hong Kong doctors, and involved face-to-face semi-structured interviews (n = 28). Thematic analysis of the data from women indicated that the social factors of cost, educational base, knowledge of risk, the social value of early detection and cultural issues such as modesty and embarrassment contributed to screening attendance. The doctors perceived a cultural tendency towards fatalism, as well as seeing the gender, interpersonal and interprofessional skills of the practitioner to be important in influencing levels of Chinese women's shyness and discomfort, and hence affecting attendance. The lay and practitioner data sets varied in the perceptions of women's pain, embarrassment and risk factors. Programmes providing services for Chinese women need to ensure that the philosophy of the staff and the approach and materials used are culturally relevant. Recommendations are that nurses equipped with relevant social and cultural knowledge of population groups should have a central role in health promotion and screening services.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Perceived Risk and Help-Seeking Behavior for Breast CancerCancer Nursing, 2000
- Minority Women and Breast Cancer Screening: The Role of Cultural Explanatory ModelsPreventive Medicine, 1998
- A Review of Cervical Cancer Screening Intervention Research: Implications for Public Health Programs and Future ResearchPreventive Medicine, 1998
- Hispanic women's beliefs about breast cancer and mammographyCancer Nursing, 1996
- Women's preferences for cervical screening: who, where and whenHealth Education Journal, 1996
- The woman at increased risk for breast cancer: evaluation and management strategiesCA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 1995
- Beliefs and Attitudes as Determinants of Cervical Cancer Screening: A Community-Based Study in SingaporePreventive Medicine, 1995
- Explanatory models for cancer among African-American women at two Atlanta neighborhood health centers: The implications for a cancer screening programSocial Science & Medicine, 1994
- Differences Between Black and White Women With Breast Cancer in Time From Symptom Recognition to Medical ConsultationJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1992
- Cancer of the breast in poor black womenCancer, 1989