Understanding why women with breast cancer present late

Introduction: Breast cancer (BC) has the highest incidence and mortality of all cancers among women in Singapore. Despite increasing affluence, education, healthcare accessibility, and the institution of nation-wide breast screening programmes, the incidence of locally advanced breast cancer (LABC...

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Main Author: Kiang, Wen Wei
Other Authors: Tan Ern Yu
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72630
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-726302020-11-01T05:33:36Z Understanding why women with breast cancer present late Kiang, Wen Wei Tan Ern Yu Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) DRNTU::Science::Medicine Introduction: Breast cancer (BC) has the highest incidence and mortality of all cancers among women in Singapore. Despite increasing affluence, education, healthcare accessibility, and the institution of nation-wide breast screening programmes, the incidence of locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) remains much higher than that seen in Western countries. Locally advanced breast cancer is often attributed to delayed presentation and our study aims to elucidate the factors underlying this. Methods: A total of 100 consecutive women who presented with LABC were systematically interviewed using a self-designed questionnaire. The featured questions explore each patient’s socioeconomic status, known risk factors of BC, awareness of BC and screening, as well as BC screening compliance. Results: We found that the women were generally well-educated and had good BC awareness. Notably, the majority of women acknowledged that screening was effective in detecting BC. However, compliance to screening was poor, with most women not doing regular breast self-examination (BSE) or mammographic screening because they saw no need for screening if asymptomatic. It was noted that this group of women were younger, better educated, financially stable, and have a better general awareness of BC and screening. Conclusion: The mismatch between knowledge and practices was evident, being in stark contrast to previous studies in less-developed countries, where there was a strong correlation between BC awareness and screening compliance. The women who did not feel screening was required if asymptomatic clearly misunderstood the purpose of screening, which is for asymptomatic individuals. There again appears to be a mismatch between general BC knowledge and understanding of screening, highlighting a potential failure in BC education programmes in imparting this particular concept. This study highlights a need to educate Singaporean women about the rationale and purpose of BC screening. Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery 2017-08-31T03:13:02Z 2017-08-31T03:13:02Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72630 en 17 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Medicine
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Medicine
Kiang, Wen Wei
Understanding why women with breast cancer present late
description Introduction: Breast cancer (BC) has the highest incidence and mortality of all cancers among women in Singapore. Despite increasing affluence, education, healthcare accessibility, and the institution of nation-wide breast screening programmes, the incidence of locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) remains much higher than that seen in Western countries. Locally advanced breast cancer is often attributed to delayed presentation and our study aims to elucidate the factors underlying this. Methods: A total of 100 consecutive women who presented with LABC were systematically interviewed using a self-designed questionnaire. The featured questions explore each patient’s socioeconomic status, known risk factors of BC, awareness of BC and screening, as well as BC screening compliance. Results: We found that the women were generally well-educated and had good BC awareness. Notably, the majority of women acknowledged that screening was effective in detecting BC. However, compliance to screening was poor, with most women not doing regular breast self-examination (BSE) or mammographic screening because they saw no need for screening if asymptomatic. It was noted that this group of women were younger, better educated, financially stable, and have a better general awareness of BC and screening. Conclusion: The mismatch between knowledge and practices was evident, being in stark contrast to previous studies in less-developed countries, where there was a strong correlation between BC awareness and screening compliance. The women who did not feel screening was required if asymptomatic clearly misunderstood the purpose of screening, which is for asymptomatic individuals. There again appears to be a mismatch between general BC knowledge and understanding of screening, highlighting a potential failure in BC education programmes in imparting this particular concept. This study highlights a need to educate Singaporean women about the rationale and purpose of BC screening.
author2 Tan Ern Yu
author_facet Tan Ern Yu
Kiang, Wen Wei
format Final Year Project
author Kiang, Wen Wei
author_sort Kiang, Wen Wei
title Understanding why women with breast cancer present late
title_short Understanding why women with breast cancer present late
title_full Understanding why women with breast cancer present late
title_fullStr Understanding why women with breast cancer present late
title_full_unstemmed Understanding why women with breast cancer present late
title_sort understanding why women with breast cancer present late
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72630
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