Knowledge and attitudes towards cervical cancer and screening among migrant women: a qualitative study in Portugal

Objective To explore the perceptions of migrant women, healthcare professionals and community workers regarding migrant women’s knowledge and attitudes about cervical cancer (CC) and screening and how these influence cervical cancer screening (CCS) uptake.Design Qualitative study with seven focus gr...

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Main Authors: Inês Fronteira, Patrícia Marques, Sónia Dias, Ana Gama, Joana Silva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2024-12-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/14/12/e082538.full
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author Inês Fronteira
Patrícia Marques
Sónia Dias
Ana Gama
Joana Silva
author_facet Inês Fronteira
Patrícia Marques
Sónia Dias
Ana Gama
Joana Silva
author_sort Inês Fronteira
collection DOAJ
description Objective To explore the perceptions of migrant women, healthcare professionals and community workers regarding migrant women’s knowledge and attitudes about cervical cancer (CC) and screening and how these influence cervical cancer screening (CCS) uptake.Design Qualitative study with seven focus groups, using a semistructured guide.Setting Five focus groups were conducted online and two in community associations in Lisbon, Portugal.Participants This study included 23 migrant women, 12 healthcare professionals and 10 community workers.Results A lack of knowledge and negative attitudes towards screening among migrants were discussed as important factors leading to a lower CCS uptake. For participants, many migrant women are unaware of the disease and CCS. Feelings of uneasiness related to screening and reservation from their husbands towards consultations underlie negative attitudes towards CCS. Disparities among migrant women regarding uptake of CCS rooted on sociocultural factors were highlighted, with women from African origin and older tending to engage less. Healthcare professionals were identified as the preferred source of information; nevertheless, difficulties in delivering information on sensitive topics were reported by professionals. Additionally, participants agreed that peers and social networks may play a role in promoting screening among communities.Conclusions Healthcare professionals and community actors are paramount to promote CCS among migrant women, especially through culturally adapted awareness interventions and health-promoting activities engaging local communities and social networks of women. Training on cross-cultural communication skills of healthcare professionals may contribute to improving migrant women’s knowledge and uptake of CCS.
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spelling doaj-art-8a631c978d0a41e4b2f94fa49c2d68092025-01-14T13:00:11ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552024-12-01141210.1136/bmjopen-2023-082538Knowledge and attitudes towards cervical cancer and screening among migrant women: a qualitative study in PortugalInês Fronteira0Patrícia Marques1Sónia Dias2Ana Gama3Joana Silva41 National School of Public Health, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal1 National School of Public Health, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal1 National School of Public Health, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal1 National School of Public Health, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal1 National School of Public Health, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, Lisbon, PortugalObjective To explore the perceptions of migrant women, healthcare professionals and community workers regarding migrant women’s knowledge and attitudes about cervical cancer (CC) and screening and how these influence cervical cancer screening (CCS) uptake.Design Qualitative study with seven focus groups, using a semistructured guide.Setting Five focus groups were conducted online and two in community associations in Lisbon, Portugal.Participants This study included 23 migrant women, 12 healthcare professionals and 10 community workers.Results A lack of knowledge and negative attitudes towards screening among migrants were discussed as important factors leading to a lower CCS uptake. For participants, many migrant women are unaware of the disease and CCS. Feelings of uneasiness related to screening and reservation from their husbands towards consultations underlie negative attitudes towards CCS. Disparities among migrant women regarding uptake of CCS rooted on sociocultural factors were highlighted, with women from African origin and older tending to engage less. Healthcare professionals were identified as the preferred source of information; nevertheless, difficulties in delivering information on sensitive topics were reported by professionals. Additionally, participants agreed that peers and social networks may play a role in promoting screening among communities.Conclusions Healthcare professionals and community actors are paramount to promote CCS among migrant women, especially through culturally adapted awareness interventions and health-promoting activities engaging local communities and social networks of women. Training on cross-cultural communication skills of healthcare professionals may contribute to improving migrant women’s knowledge and uptake of CCS.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/14/12/e082538.full
spellingShingle Inês Fronteira
Patrícia Marques
Sónia Dias
Ana Gama
Joana Silva
Knowledge and attitudes towards cervical cancer and screening among migrant women: a qualitative study in Portugal
BMJ Open
title Knowledge and attitudes towards cervical cancer and screening among migrant women: a qualitative study in Portugal
title_full Knowledge and attitudes towards cervical cancer and screening among migrant women: a qualitative study in Portugal
title_fullStr Knowledge and attitudes towards cervical cancer and screening among migrant women: a qualitative study in Portugal
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge and attitudes towards cervical cancer and screening among migrant women: a qualitative study in Portugal
title_short Knowledge and attitudes towards cervical cancer and screening among migrant women: a qualitative study in Portugal
title_sort knowledge and attitudes towards cervical cancer and screening among migrant women a qualitative study in portugal
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/14/12/e082538.full
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