Health literacy, knowledge on cervical cancer and pap smear and its influence on pre-marital malay muslim women attitude towards pap smear

Background: Cervical cancer is preventable. In Malaysia, women are found to have good awareness of the disease and yet, the Pap smear uptake is still poor. Measuring health literacy level could explain this discrepancy. This study aims to determine the relationship between health literacy, level of...

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Published in:Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
Main Author: Baharum N.N.; Ariffin F.; Isa M.R.; Tin S.T.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asian Pacific Organization for Cancer Prevention 2020
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85088625010&doi=10.31557%2fAPJCP.2020.21.7.2021&partnerID=40&md5=11f6fb265aea7b8228b2f5ef789bcb49
id 2-s2.0-85088625010
spelling 2-s2.0-85088625010
Baharum N.N.; Ariffin F.; Isa M.R.; Tin S.T.
Health literacy, knowledge on cervical cancer and pap smear and its influence on pre-marital malay muslim women attitude towards pap smear
2020
Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
21
7
10.31557/APJCP.2020.21.7.2021
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85088625010&doi=10.31557%2fAPJCP.2020.21.7.2021&partnerID=40&md5=11f6fb265aea7b8228b2f5ef789bcb49
Background: Cervical cancer is preventable. In Malaysia, women are found to have good awareness of the disease and yet, the Pap smear uptake is still poor. Measuring health literacy level could explain this discrepancy. This study aims to determine the relationship between health literacy, level of knowledge of cervical cancer and Pap smear with attitude towards Pap smear among women attending pre-marital course. Methods: A cross sectional study was performed in three randomly selected centres that organised pre-marital courses. All Malay Muslim women participants aged 18 to 40 years old were recruited while non-Malaysian, illiterate, and had hysterectomy were excluded. Validated self-administered questionnaires used were European Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q16 Malay) and Knowledge and attitude towards Cervical Cancer and Pap Smear Questionnaire. The mean percentage score (mean± SD) was calculated, with higher scores showed better outcomes. Multiple linear regression was used to measure the relationship of independent variables with attitude towards Pap smear. Results: A total of 417 participants were recruited with a mean age of 24.9 ± 3.56 years old. Prevalence of awareness of cervical cancer was 91.6% (n=382, 95% CI: 89.0%, 94.2%) and mean percentage score was 74.7%±7.6. Prevalence of awareness of Pap smear was 59.0% (n=246, 95% CI: 54.2%, 63.8%) and mean percentage score was 80.2% ± 6.5. The health literacy mean score was 13.3±3.6, with minimum score 0 and maximum score 16. The mean percentage score of attitudes towards Pap smear was 64.8%±9.3. Multiple linear regression analysis demonstrated significant relationship between health literacy (p=0.047) and knowledge of Pap smear (p<0.001) with attitude towards Pap smear. Conclusion: A higher health literacy with high knowledge of Pap smear improves the attitude towards Pap smear. Pre-marital course is an opportunistic platform to disseminate information to improve health literacy and knowledge of cervical cancer and Pap smear screening. © 2020, Higher Education Press Limited Company.
Asian Pacific Organization for Cancer Prevention
15137368
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Baharum N.N.; Ariffin F.; Isa M.R.; Tin S.T.
spellingShingle Baharum N.N.; Ariffin F.; Isa M.R.; Tin S.T.
Health literacy, knowledge on cervical cancer and pap smear and its influence on pre-marital malay muslim women attitude towards pap smear
author_facet Baharum N.N.; Ariffin F.; Isa M.R.; Tin S.T.
author_sort Baharum N.N.; Ariffin F.; Isa M.R.; Tin S.T.
title Health literacy, knowledge on cervical cancer and pap smear and its influence on pre-marital malay muslim women attitude towards pap smear
title_short Health literacy, knowledge on cervical cancer and pap smear and its influence on pre-marital malay muslim women attitude towards pap smear
title_full Health literacy, knowledge on cervical cancer and pap smear and its influence on pre-marital malay muslim women attitude towards pap smear
title_fullStr Health literacy, knowledge on cervical cancer and pap smear and its influence on pre-marital malay muslim women attitude towards pap smear
title_full_unstemmed Health literacy, knowledge on cervical cancer and pap smear and its influence on pre-marital malay muslim women attitude towards pap smear
title_sort Health literacy, knowledge on cervical cancer and pap smear and its influence on pre-marital malay muslim women attitude towards pap smear
publishDate 2020
container_title Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
container_volume 21
container_issue 7
doi_str_mv 10.31557/APJCP.2020.21.7.2021
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85088625010&doi=10.31557%2fAPJCP.2020.21.7.2021&partnerID=40&md5=11f6fb265aea7b8228b2f5ef789bcb49
description Background: Cervical cancer is preventable. In Malaysia, women are found to have good awareness of the disease and yet, the Pap smear uptake is still poor. Measuring health literacy level could explain this discrepancy. This study aims to determine the relationship between health literacy, level of knowledge of cervical cancer and Pap smear with attitude towards Pap smear among women attending pre-marital course. Methods: A cross sectional study was performed in three randomly selected centres that organised pre-marital courses. All Malay Muslim women participants aged 18 to 40 years old were recruited while non-Malaysian, illiterate, and had hysterectomy were excluded. Validated self-administered questionnaires used were European Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q16 Malay) and Knowledge and attitude towards Cervical Cancer and Pap Smear Questionnaire. The mean percentage score (mean± SD) was calculated, with higher scores showed better outcomes. Multiple linear regression was used to measure the relationship of independent variables with attitude towards Pap smear. Results: A total of 417 participants were recruited with a mean age of 24.9 ± 3.56 years old. Prevalence of awareness of cervical cancer was 91.6% (n=382, 95% CI: 89.0%, 94.2%) and mean percentage score was 74.7%±7.6. Prevalence of awareness of Pap smear was 59.0% (n=246, 95% CI: 54.2%, 63.8%) and mean percentage score was 80.2% ± 6.5. The health literacy mean score was 13.3±3.6, with minimum score 0 and maximum score 16. The mean percentage score of attitudes towards Pap smear was 64.8%±9.3. Multiple linear regression analysis demonstrated significant relationship between health literacy (p=0.047) and knowledge of Pap smear (p<0.001) with attitude towards Pap smear. Conclusion: A higher health literacy with high knowledge of Pap smear improves the attitude towards Pap smear. Pre-marital course is an opportunistic platform to disseminate information to improve health literacy and knowledge of cervical cancer and Pap smear screening. © 2020, Higher Education Press Limited Company.
publisher Asian Pacific Organization for Cancer Prevention
issn 15137368
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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