dc.description.abstract |
Cultural beliefs influencing the uptake of cervical cancer screening among women in a
community healthcare centre.
1.1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
Globally cervical cancer was found to be the fourth most common cancer among women in
2012. There were an estimated 528,000 new cases and approximately 266,000 female
deaths of cervical cancer in 2012 worldwide. The Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) was being
associated with about 70 percent of all cervical cancers (World Health Organization [WHO]
2015:43). In South Africa, cervical cancer is still the most common cancer diagnosed in
women. Despite this fact, the uptake of cervical cancer screening in a designated community
centre in the Tshwane district in the Gauteng Province of South Africa (SA) is low.
1.2 PURPOSE OF THE STUDY
The purpose of the study was to explore and describe cultural beliefs influencing the uptake
of cervical cancer screening among women in a designated community healthcare centre.
1.3 METHOD
A qualitative descriptive design was used, as the researcher was interested in exploring and
describing whether cultural health beliefs influence the uptake of cervical cancer screening.
The study was conducted at a designated community healthcare centre, which is situated in
a Pretoria West suburb in the Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality of the Gauteng Province in
South Africa. The population were women who were 35 years and older who have not made
use of cervical cancer screening services before, and who attend the selected departments
for other reasons than for screening for cervical cancer.
Purposive sampling was used to select participants as they visited the community health
centre’s chronic as well as maternal child and women’s health services (MCHW) at mother
and child healthcare departments. The researcher handed out fliers to all women patients of
the departments. The fliers contained information about the study and the inclusion criteria
for the sample. The researcher’s contact number was also included on the flier in order for
interested women to make contact with her once they have decided to participate, or to get
more information about the study.
Focus group interviews were conducted at the designated community healthcare centre.
Consent was obtained for participation as well as for the use of audio recording beforehand.
The interviews were conducted in the English and Sesotho language. The same group of
participants were interviewed until data saturation was reached, meaning that no new
information was to be obtained. The researcher and co-coder (who both understood Sesotho
and English) organised data and translated it. The researcher then interpreted and
discussed the findings in a ‘dialogue’ between it and the existing knowledge base related to
the studied phenomenon.
1.4 FINDINGS
The following four categories emerged from this study; Fear of cervical cancer results,
cervical cancer is perceived to be caused by sacred or indecent behaviour, spousal approval
needed for cervical cancer screening and women should address gynaecological health
issues with women. Furthermore nine sub-categories emerged from the categories.
The study found that cultural beliefs played an important role in influencing the uptake of
cervical cancer screening in the designated community healthcare centre. Most families in
this study were led by males, and participants reported that these males lack knowledge of
cervical cancer-related issues. Women were expected to be submissive to their husbands
and were not allowed to proceed with health-related procedures without the consent of their
husbands. Participants verbalised that they lacked spousal support when it came to cervical
cancer screening. Husbands could not approve of their wives having cervical cancer
screening performed on them, as the disease was stigmatised. Participants in this study did
not consider it necessary to seek cervical cancer screening, as they did not present any
symptoms. Participants were most fearful of being diagnosed with the disease and feared
losing their husbands due to the treatment procedure that entailed the removal of the uterus,
and therefore preferred to remain in denial.
Fear of contracting other diseases such as Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome while performing cervical cancer screening was also reported.
The community believed that women with cervical cancer were promiscuous or had
abortions and hence women in this study refrained from screening for the disease for fear of
being judged. It was also believed that the disease affected widows who failed to adhere to
cultural rituals performed to the following the death of their husbands. The study found that
cultural restrictions did not allow women’s bodies to be viewed by men other than their
husbands. The disease was regarded as a taboo, and it was never communicated within
families and the community. In the families, women were not expected to talk about women
health issues to their husbands as it was regarded as disrespectfulness. They were
expected to discuss such issues with elderly female structures within the families. This also
created a barrier as most participants reported that they did not get along with these elderly
female structures.
1.5 CONCLUSION
It was evident that cultural beliefs played an important role in cervical cancer screening. The
community, including men, need to be educated about cervical cancer-related issues while
remaining culturally sensitive. Women had to be given a choice of gender preference at the
designated healthcare centre when seeking cervical cancer screening.
Keywords: cervical, cancer, screening, uptake, culture, beliefs, Pap smear, Human
Papillomavirus, barriers and symptoms. |
en_ZA |
dc.identifier.citation |
Moeti, C 2019, Cultural beliefs influencing cervical cancer screening among women in a community healthcare centre, MCur (Nursing Science) Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/76012> |
en_ZA |