“In the Village That She Comes from, Most of the People Don’t Know Anything about Cervical Cancer”: A Health Systems Appraisal of Cervical Cancer Prevention Services in Tanzania
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Theoretical Framework
2.2. The Cervical Cancer Prevention Program of Tanzania
2.3. Study Participants
3. Data Collection
Data Analysis
4. Results
- Knowledge of the role of screening and preventive care/services
“Women are not so much aware of cervical cancer so it will take time for them to become aware about understand the importance of screening for their health. I just educate them and then it will take time for them to think and to prepare themselves, and then they will come—so it takes time”.
“So, she said that awareness should be spread in different areas. Because she mentioned the village that she comes from, most of the people don’t know anything about cervical cancer. So, awareness should be provided”.
“So, it just started, and people are not that well informed. And the project, is not that well, not that well organized, compared to maybe ctc [HIV clinic] when we can go to the villages and talk to people about HIV, reach out to them. For cervical cancer it is different, we don’t have such activities going on, or such organized procedures or activities. For maybe a certain period you have screened a certain number of people or go to the villages to talk to them so they can come to be screened—they are not that established. So, you’ve got to get a larger number of people and also difficult to get the information to the people if you are not going to them. Because they won’t come here, you have to go to them. It is different in the town, where people are well informed about their health, and they have to follow. But in the villages, you have to follow them—tell them, teach them”.
“The ones who have already come are the ones who will go back and tell like she was told by the neighbor that it’s fine, there’s no problem. So, when they go back and tell them, they will come”.
“She says that not everyone knows, but a lot of them know. Mostly because if they come here then they’re told about it, and then those who go back actually tell their colleagues about it. She’s even been told by some of her colleagues that she should bring them here”.
“From the radio, I heard that cervical cancer is a dangerous disease, so it is good to do screening at the earlier stage. So that is why I decided to go to the clinic for the check-up”.
“Almost everyone in this country, in Africa has a radio. Or radio access. So, you cannot be scared they’ll get your information- then comes, of course, the TV, which is not all that, not everyone has a TV, but many people have TVs”.
“Of course, yea challenges—they may refuse treatment like cryotherapy—like one client refused cryotherapy.—and others when you refer them to KCMC don’t go. But most they agree to be screened”.
“Most women, accept this screening only a few have not already decided about screening. From today, only three women refused to do the screening, so I’m not sure if they are going to accept or they will just leave”.
“Some they are afraid, ignorance..... we are going into the church, we are giving information to the church. Even to the market, the schools, but others are not coming”.
- 2.
- Education (HCPs)
“I don’t think even among the health profession, that, I don’t know which percentage I should mention. But I don’t think that people know quite—that people know exactly how to walk through it”.
“Updating, more education to the community and also training more staff to know about cervical cancer”.
“So, you have these young, young doctors, only the old doctors don’t know, old nurses who have trained twenty years ago, they are probably not very aware about cervical cancer. They are aware of cervical cancer but, screening and a lot of information about it, no. In terms of patients, the population I don’t think they have a lot of information on cervical cancer, no”.
“They should educate more people on the job training we’re two…. when we will train more staff here our services will improve….and in the rural areas we need to train more staff and home service care providers…. of course, when you talk with them they don’t know so much about the cervical cancer screening”.
“I think that we have to train people in different categories, yeah. Train the specialists, train the other nurse- the other doctors, sorry, the other practitioners, the nurses, the advanced medical officers, so that every person can screen”.
- 3.
- Education (Women at Risk)
“They come from their home to here, and we give them the education…. health education……the general issues about cervical cancer and after that for those who are willing to screen their health…. they are screened….and then they get their result if it is positive or negative. If it is negative, we give them the next date for check, but for those whom the problem is so big and we feel we can’t solve, we refer to other places”.
“Provision of education is needed. And also, on that education, they are supposed to give so that they can get it even through men. So, if they know that, a lot of women would be willing to go for screening”.
- 4.
- Beliefs on Cervical Cancer Screening
“She said that this contraception can cause cervical cancer”.
“Before I knew about cervical cancer, I knew it’s a disease you can get from different medicines which a lot of women like to use. Or you can get different types of food, which you like to eat. Also, I didn’t know if this disease if you can get it from men. I thought maybe it was only for women. Before I know that”.
- 5.
- Traditional Medicine
“They want to go to a traditional attendant (inaudible 38:20) or a traditional doctor who can say, this is just someone who has bewitched you, I can take care of you. They can understand”.
“One patient came and said if you diagnosed with cervical cancer in KCMC she used the local herbs, but they don’t treat anything?”
“The education provided by KCMC helped us, and we got no disturbance and when you go there with your husband, they give you priority. (move that to another theme- treatment?)”.
“If I go to a traditional doctor and they say, ‘bring on God I can take care of this’ and a god will cost about 150–200,000 Tanzanian shillings. And you go to Ocean Road [National Cancer Hospital of Tanzania]. One course of chemotherapy will cost 400,000. Okay? So which options will you take? If you are my relative looking after me? You going to take the easiest option available. So, that’s still a big gap”.
- 6.
- Risk Factors
“High risk—patients with- who are HIV positive. And the screening, because there is no formal clinic, we usually do screening based on request patients who have requested, and then we have other satellite screening sites. They refer like this patient has a problem, please take a look at her—we’ll do that”.
“They mentioned about HIV. That the one who has HIV-positive are at risk of getting this cervical cancer”.
“Yeah, there are so many risk factors. HIV is just one of them and it has been publicized because with HIV the disease progression is very fast, but there are many other risk factors for getting cervical cancer”.
“The low immunity, and for those who start sexual intercourse from the beginning are in risk to get the cervical cancer…and also those who get the human papillomaviruses…they are also at risk to get the cervical cancer”.
“Yeah, and also another challenge is for young kids. Before they are grown up, sometimes they have a lot of—they have multiple partners, for them, they don’t know it is risky. Or whatever, for cervical cancer”.
“We have to intensify this sexual reproductive health to these young ladies so that they can delay sexual intercourse so if we manage to go directly to the school to input information for cervical cancer prevention it will be better than staying until you get suffer then you look for the service”.- use a narrative to explain more”.
- 7.
- Symptoms and Signs
“I visited before, I was getting pain in the stomach and then I went to the hospital and then the doctor recommended to me to do cervical cancer screening”.
“You can see the elder women come to you and complain about the PV bleeding, post-coital bleeding and follow the discharge and when you insert the speculum you see there is cancer”.
“Because I have this abnormal stomach frequently, that is why also I decided to do screening”.
“Symptoms caught me when I was at home it started by getting abdomen pain and when I had sex, I felt pain and blood coming out when I was on my period the period lasted for long like a month, I went to Mawenzi hospital and got medication”.
5. Discussion
5.1. Strategies for Increasing Knowledge of the Role of Screening and Preventive Care/Services
5.2. Education
5.3. Beliefs on Cervical Cancer Screening
5.4. Traditional Medicine
5.5. Risk Factors/Symptoms and Signs
6. Strengths and Limitations
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Interview Participants | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Group | Location | No. Interviewed | Median Age | No. Females | No. Males |
Cervical cancer screening program leadership | KCMC, ORCI, Bombo Referral Hospital | 8 (1 = Senior Lecturer and Senior Consultant for Gynecology and Obstetrics, 2 = Specialist (Oncology), 1 = Professor Gynecology and Obstetrics, 1 = Gynecologist, 1 = Cervical Cancer Focal Person MOH, 1 = RRCHCo, 1 = In Charge of Clinic | Not collected | 4 | 4 |
Healthcare Providers | Mt Meru, Marangu Hospital, Meru District Hospital, Pasua Health Center, TPC Hospital, Kibosho Hospital, ORCI, Kilema, SEVIA Screening Sites, KCMC, Bombo Referral Hospital | 24 (AMO = 2, MD = 12, MO = 1, Nurse = 9) | Not collected | 13 | 11 |
Women at Risk of Cervical Cancer (Women at Risk/Clients) | ORCI, Kilema, TPC, Pamoja Tunaweza Women’s Centre, SEVIA Screening Sites | 39 | 46 (18–80 years old, 50 years old as the most common age, three unknown ages) | 39 | 0 |
Location | Rural/Urban | Private/Public/Faith-Based |
---|---|---|
Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center (KCMC) | Urban | Faith-Based/Public Hybrid |
Mt. Meru Hospital | Urban | Public |
Ocean Road Cancer Institute (ORCI) | Urban | Public |
Kilema Hospital | Rural | Faith-Based |
TPC Hospital | Rural | Private |
Marangu Hospital | Rural | Faith-Based |
Meru District Hospital | Urban | Public |
Pasua Health Center | Urban | Public |
Kibosho Hospital | Rural | Faith-Based |
Bombo Regional Referral Hospital | Semi-Rural | Public |
Themes | Sub-Themes | Examples of Evidence |
---|---|---|
Knowledge of the role of screening and preventive care/services | Health Promotion, Word of Mouth, Radio, and Refusal of Screening | “Awareness should be spread in different areas…Most people don’t know anything about cervical cancer. So, awareness should be provided”. (Patient) |
Knowledge and Training (HCPs) | Training | “I don’t think even among the health profession… that people know exactly how to walk through it (HCP)”. |
Knowledge (Women at Risk) | - | “Provision of education is needed... [healthcare providers] are supposed to [provide education]. [If we can educate men], a lot of women would be willing to go for screening (HCP)”. |
Beliefs on Cervical Cancer Screening | - | “She said that contraception can cause cervical cancer” (Patient) |
Traditional Medicine | - | “They want to go to a traditional attendant or a traditional doctor who can say, ‘This is just someone [who has] bewitched you. I can take care of you’“ (HCP) |
Risk Factors | HIV, Early Sexual Intercourse | “They mentioned.. that [those who are] HIV-positive are at risk of getting cervical cancer” (Patient) |
Symptoms and Signs | Pain | “[Elderly] women come and complain about... bleeding, post-bleeding and... discharge. When you insert the speculum... there is cancer” (HCP) |
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Chelva, M.; Kaushal, S.; West, N.; Erwin, E.; Yuma, S.; Sleeth, J.; Yahya-Malima, K.I.; Shelley, D.; Risso-Gill, I.; Yeates, K. “In the Village That She Comes from, Most of the People Don’t Know Anything about Cervical Cancer”: A Health Systems Appraisal of Cervical Cancer Prevention Services in Tanzania. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024, 21, 1059. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21081059
Chelva M, Kaushal S, West N, Erwin E, Yuma S, Sleeth J, Yahya-Malima KI, Shelley D, Risso-Gill I, Yeates K. “In the Village That She Comes from, Most of the People Don’t Know Anything about Cervical Cancer”: A Health Systems Appraisal of Cervical Cancer Prevention Services in Tanzania. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2024; 21(8):1059. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21081059
Chicago/Turabian StyleChelva, Melinda, Sanchit Kaushal, Nicola West, Erica Erwin, Safina Yuma, Jessica Sleeth, Khadija I. Yahya-Malima, Donna Shelley, Isabelle Risso-Gill, and Karen Yeates. 2024. "“In the Village That She Comes from, Most of the People Don’t Know Anything about Cervical Cancer”: A Health Systems Appraisal of Cervical Cancer Prevention Services in Tanzania" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 21, no. 8: 1059. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21081059
APA StyleChelva, M., Kaushal, S., West, N., Erwin, E., Yuma, S., Sleeth, J., Yahya-Malima, K. I., Shelley, D., Risso-Gill, I., & Yeates, K. (2024). “In the Village That She Comes from, Most of the People Don’t Know Anything about Cervical Cancer”: A Health Systems Appraisal of Cervical Cancer Prevention Services in Tanzania. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 21(8), 1059. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21081059