ACCULTURATION AND CERVICAL-CANCER - KNOWLEDGE, BELIEFS, AND BEHAVIORSOF HISPANIC WOMEN

Citation
Mp. Harmon et al., ACCULTURATION AND CERVICAL-CANCER - KNOWLEDGE, BELIEFS, AND BEHAVIORSOF HISPANIC WOMEN, Women & health, 24(3), 1996, pp. 37-57
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Women s Studies","Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath
Journal title
ISSN journal
03630242
Volume
24
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
37 - 57
Database
ISI
SICI code
0363-0242(1996)24:3<37:AAC-KB>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
In a community-based sample of Hispanic women, this study examines dif ferences in relation to level of acculturation in knowledge about the Pap examination, fear/fatalism towards cancer, and cervical cancer scr eening behaviors. Respondents were randomly chosen from 11 churches in the Phoenix metropolitan area (n=566) and were categorized into three acculturation levels: low (35.2%), bicultural (26.3%), and high (38.5 %). Interviews focused on family history of cancer as well as knowledg e about cancer and utilization of screening techniques for breast and cervical cancers. OLS regression and probit analyses were conducted to examine the role of acculturation in differentiating Hispanic subgrou ps in relation to knowledge, beliefs, and behaviors regarding cervical cancer. Findings of the present study indicate that Hispanic women in the Phoenix metropolitan area are utilizing cervical cancer screening services with over 90 percent of women in all three acculturation gro ups ever having had a Pap exam and more than 50 percent having had the examination during the past year. However, results also indicate that of the Hispanic subgroups examined, lower acculturated Hispanic women have less knowledge about Pap smears and exhibit lower utilization ra tes for cervical cancer screening. These results suggest that lower-ac culturated Hispanic women comprise the subgroup of Hispanics that is a t greatest risk of presenting with advanced stages of cervical cancer. Results have implications for cancer screening and education programs for Hispanic women as well as implications for health care profession als who serve this population.