Enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study.

Introduction: Cervical cancer has long been known as a preventable disease. Yet it still is a prime women's health issue globally. In Malaysia, the current cervical cancer screening program, introduced in the 1960s, has been found to be unsuccessful in terms of Pap smear coverage. The aim of th...

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Main Authors: Abdullah, Fauziah, Tin, Tin Su
Format: Article
Published: West Asia Organization for Cancer Prevention 2010
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/110/
http://journal.waocp.org/article_25379_7099cc58edb5835e4a3718b66af345ec.pdf
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spelling my.um.eprints.1102019-12-16T08:52:23Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/110/ Enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study. Abdullah, Fauziah Tin, Tin Su R Medicine (General) Introduction: Cervical cancer has long been known as a preventable disease. Yet it still is a prime women's health issue globally. In Malaysia, the current cervical cancer screening program, introduced in the 1960s, has been found to be unsuccessful in terms of Pap smear coverage. The aim of this study is to determine providers perceptives on the program and the feasibility of practicing an organized cervical screening program in Malaysia. Methods: 11 key informant interviews were conducted with policy makers and health care providers from the Ministry of Health in Malaysia from October 2009 to May 2010. Interviewees' perceptions were explored on current and organized cervical screening program based on their expertise and experience. Results: The results highlighted that the existing cervical screening program in Malaysia faced flaws at all levels that failed to reduce cervical cancer morbidity and mortality. The identified weaknesses were poor acceptance by women, lack of commitment by health care providers, nature of the program, an improper follow-up system, limited resources and other competing needs. Complementarily, all interviewees perceived an organized cervical screening program as an alternative approach both feasible and acceptable by women and government to practice in Malaysia. Conclusion: Better screening coverage depends on an effective screening program that incorporates a behaviour-based strategy. A new program should be focused in the policy-making context to improve screening coverage and to effectively combat cervical cancer. West Asia Organization for Cancer Prevention 2010 Article PeerReviewed Abdullah, Fauziah and Tin, Tin Su (2010) Enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study. Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention, 11 (5). pp. 1359-1366. ISSN 1513-7368 http://journal.waocp.org/article_25379_7099cc58edb5835e4a3718b66af345ec.pdf 21198293
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine (General)
spellingShingle R Medicine (General)
Abdullah, Fauziah
Tin, Tin Su
Enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study.
description Introduction: Cervical cancer has long been known as a preventable disease. Yet it still is a prime women's health issue globally. In Malaysia, the current cervical cancer screening program, introduced in the 1960s, has been found to be unsuccessful in terms of Pap smear coverage. The aim of this study is to determine providers perceptives on the program and the feasibility of practicing an organized cervical screening program in Malaysia. Methods: 11 key informant interviews were conducted with policy makers and health care providers from the Ministry of Health in Malaysia from October 2009 to May 2010. Interviewees' perceptions were explored on current and organized cervical screening program based on their expertise and experience. Results: The results highlighted that the existing cervical screening program in Malaysia faced flaws at all levels that failed to reduce cervical cancer morbidity and mortality. The identified weaknesses were poor acceptance by women, lack of commitment by health care providers, nature of the program, an improper follow-up system, limited resources and other competing needs. Complementarily, all interviewees perceived an organized cervical screening program as an alternative approach both feasible and acceptable by women and government to practice in Malaysia. Conclusion: Better screening coverage depends on an effective screening program that incorporates a behaviour-based strategy. A new program should be focused in the policy-making context to improve screening coverage and to effectively combat cervical cancer.
format Article
author Abdullah, Fauziah
Tin, Tin Su
author_facet Abdullah, Fauziah
Tin, Tin Su
author_sort Abdullah, Fauziah
title Enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study.
title_short Enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study.
title_full Enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study.
title_fullStr Enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study.
title_full_unstemmed Enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study.
title_sort enhancement of the cervical cancer screening program in malaysia: a qualitative study.
publisher West Asia Organization for Cancer Prevention
publishDate 2010
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/110/
http://journal.waocp.org/article_25379_7099cc58edb5835e4a3718b66af345ec.pdf
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