Womens Health 1997 Fall-Winter;3(3-4):227-42
Importance of psychological variables in understanding risk perceptions
and breast cancer screening of African American women.
Bowen D, Hickman KM, Powers D.
Division of Public Health Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,
Seattle, WA 98104, USA.
African American women are less likely than white women to receive and
perform adequate breast screening, and represent a group that has not
been thoroughly researched in the area of breast cancer risk. In general,
perceptions of risk and worry about cancer are both related to obtaining
mammography and possibly other screening activities. We examine African
American women's worry and beliefs about breast cancer, and their intentions
to perform breast and genetic screening behaviors, using the self-regulatory
model. Participants were recruited via media announcements; they completed
questionnaires addressing several aspects of the self-regulatory model.
Forty-one percent of participants were underestimators, 23% were overestimators,
and 37% were extreme overestimators of their own personal risk for breast
cancer. Several variables were significant predictors of willingness to
undergo mammography and genetic screening, including ethnic identity,
attitudes toward the physician, emotional distress, and risk overestimation.
These data highlight the importance of psychological variables in understanding
screening in African American women and hold promise for intervention
design.
PMID: 9426495 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]