Comparison of three interventions to increase mammography screening in low income African American women.

Victoria L Champion, Jeffrey K Springston, Terry W Zollinger, Robert M Saywell, Patrick O Monahan, Qianqian Zhao, Kathleen M Russell
Author Information
  1. Victoria L Champion: Center for Research and Scholarship, Indiana University School of Nursing, Indianapolis, IN, USA. vchampio@iupui.edu

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Low-income African American women are more likely to die of breast cancer than their Caucasian counterparts, and at least part of the difference in mortality results from differential screening adherence. The purpose of this study was to identify more efficacious methods of promoting routine mammography screening in underserved populations.
METHODS: A prospective randomized intervention study of 344 low income African American women compared the impact of three interventions on mammography adherence and stage of readiness: (1) pamphlet only; (2) culturally appropriate video; and (3) interactive computer-assisted instruction program.
RESULTS: The interactive computer intervention program produced the greatest level of adherence to mammography (40.0%) compared to the video group (24.6%) and the pamphlet group (32.1%). When subjects in the pamphlet and video groups were combined to form a non-interactive group, this group had a significantly lower adherence than the group who received the interactive computer intervention (27.0% versus 40.0%). There was also significantly more forward movement in mammography stage of readiness among participants in the computer group (52.0%) compared to those in the pamphlet group (46.4%) or the video group (31.3%). When combining the non-interactive technology (pamphlet and video) there was also more forward movement in mammography stage of readiness for those in the interactive intervention group (52.0% moved 1 or 2 stages) compared to those in the non-interactive group (36.2%).
CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that tailored approaches are more effective than targeted messages either in print or video format. Another finding of this study is that interactive interventions are more effective than non-interactive interventions in increasing adherence and moving African American women forward in their mammogram stage of readiness.

Grants

  1. R01 CA77736/NCI NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Black or African American
Aged
Attitude to Health
Breast Neoplasms
Computer-Assisted Instruction
Female
Humans
Mammography
Mass Screening
Medically Underserved Area
Middle Aged
Pamphlets
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
Patient Education as Topic
Prospective Studies
Social Class
Video Recording

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0groupmammographyvideoadherencepamphletinteractive0%AfricanAmericanwomeninterventioncomparedinterventionsstagenon-interactivescreeningstudycomputerforwardreadinesslowincomethree12program40significantlyalsomovement52effectiveBACKGROUND:Low-incomelikelydiebreastcancerCaucasiancounterpartsleastpartdifferencemortalityresultsdifferentialpurposeidentifyefficaciousmethodspromotingroutineunderservedpopulationsMETHODS:prospectiverandomized344impactreadiness:culturallyappropriate3computer-assistedinstructionRESULTS:producedgreatestlevel246%321%subjectsgroupscombinedformlowerreceived27versusamongparticipants464%313%combiningtechnologymovedstages362%CONCLUSIONS:dataindicatetailoredapproachestargetedmessageseitherprintformatAnotherfindingincreasingmovingmammogramComparisonincrease

Similar Articles

Cited By