Correlates of non-adherence to preventive breast cancer screenings among women in Lagos State
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4314/asshj.v5i2.7Keywords:
Attitude, Breast Cancer, Factors influencing Non-Adherence, Practice, Preventive screeningsAbstract
Despite the fact that breast cancer is a public health concern the uptake of preventive screening for the disease remains an obstacle to its prevention. This article investigates the “Correlates of Non-Adherence to Preventive Breast Cancer Screenings (PBCS) among women in Lagos state.” The article specifically investigates the relationship between levels of education and knowledge of PBCS:- determines the relationship between religion and attitude to PBCS:- and establishes the relationship between levels of income and attitude to PBCS. The study adopted a non- experimental research design, and employed a cross-sectional survey method. Quantitative data was collected from a sample of 300 women using a simple random sampling technique. Data was analyzed using the Statistical Package of Social Sciences (SPSS) version 20.0. Findings showed that most of the respondents (68.8%) had heard about PBCS; and the information was obtained mostly from health workers. Only a few respondents (24.4%) had ever practiced PBCS. Financial restraints, lack of knowledge, and negative history of breast cancer in the family were some of the reasons given by the respondents who never visited a clinic for screening. Findings further indicated that place of residence is the only factor that does not determine respondents' attitude to PBCS (X2=0.001, d.o.f =1, p value=0.974). It concluded that levels of education, religion and income play a fundamental and crucial role in the practice of PBCS among women in Lagos State.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Abimbola Oluwatobi Makinde, Tracy Beauty Evbay Omorogiuwa

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.