Norah Saad M. Aljohani's research while affiliated with Najran University and other places

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Publications (1)


Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Breast Cancer Screening Methods Among Female Patients in Primary Healthcare Centers in Najran, Saudi Arabia
  • Article
  • Full-text available

September 2018

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406 Reads

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39 Citations

Journal of Cancer Education

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Sultan Yahya M. Alhammam

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Hussain Ali Salem Al Munyif

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[...]

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Norah Saad M. Aljohani

The aim of the present study was to evaluate the knowledge, attitude, and practice of breast cancer screening methods among female patients attending five primary healthcare centers in Najran, Saudi Arabia. A cross-sectional survey was conducted on 500 female patients, and a direct interview questionnaire was used to collect data. Our results indicated a low knowledge about breast cancer, breast self-examination, mammogram and clinical breast examination was 54.4%, 56%, 90.4%, and 83.8%, respectively. Nineteen percent of patients demonstrated a high knowledge of breast self-examination. Breast self-examination was performed by 35% of patients, whereas 15% of patients received mammograms and 19.8% clinical breast examinations. The most common barrier for screening methods of breast cancer was that patients were unaware of half of the screening methods. A total of 20.6% of women did not perform breast self-examinations because they were not well trained, and 26.4% of women did not receive clinical breast examinations because there was no female doctor available. The main source of information among the women patients was social media (52.4%), whereas 8.8% received information through their healthcare provider. In summary, the majority of women demonstrated poor knowledge about breast cancer and screening methods. Additional effort should be put forth through women’s healthcare providers to increase the awareness of breast cancer screening. That means we need to continue emphasizing the importance of primary healthcare for early detection of breast cancer in the early stages.

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Citations (1)


... There is a larger number of studies which have reported a high level of awareness of BC screening among women in both developed and developing countries which is not reflected by the level of uptake of BC screening. This is evidenced by high level of awareness of BC screening in this study, however, the uptake rate of BC screening was significantly low similar to the findings in the studies done by Emma et al. and Alshahrani et al. 18,23 . Socio-cultural factors and beliefs could also influence the uptake of BC screening among participants in a given study. ...

Reference:

Perceived barriers and factors influencing uptake of breast cancer screening among women: a population-based cross-sectional study
Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Breast Cancer Screening Methods Among Female Patients in Primary Healthcare Centers in Najran, Saudi Arabia

Journal of Cancer Education