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Southern medical journal · Dec 2013
Does a bite cause cancer? Misperceptions of breast cancer etiology among low-income urban women in Miami, Florida.
- Erin N Marcus, Darlene K Drummond, Noella Dietz, and Sonjia Kenya.
- From the Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, Miami, and Indian River State College, Fort Pierce, Florida.
- South. Med. J. 2013 Dec 1; 106 (12): 649-54.
ObjectivesTo explore breast cancer beliefs among a cohort of low-income, urban, English-speaking women in Miami, Florida, who had undergone screening mammography.MethodsFour focus groups of 34 women were conducted. Discussions were transcribed verbatim and transcripts were analyzed separately by two investigators using an immersion-and-crystallization approach. Common risk factors were identified by consensus.ResultsParticipants were predominantly African American (82%) women of low income (77% with a household income <$20,000/year). Common risk factors included family history, environmental factors, trauma, and sexual activity. There also was a perception that breast cancer grows rapidly and causes detectable symptoms.ConclusionsWomen voiced some accurate and numerous inaccurate beliefs regarding the causes of breast cancer, suggesting a lack of knowledge about the potential benefits and harms of screening mammography before undergoing examination. These findings highlight the importance of identifying women's underlying beliefs when initiating a discussion of breast cancer screening and prevention to ensure that messages are mutually understood.
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