Abstract

Cervical cancer is the leading cause of female cancer deaths in Sénégal which is ranked 17th in incidence globally, however, the screening rate there is very low. Nuanced gendered perceptions and health behaviors of both women and men play a significant role in women's health. Our study analyzed gender differences on perceptions of gender roles, discrimination, cancer attitudes, cancer stigma, and influences in healthcare decision making within our study population to inform ongoing cervical cancer prevention work in the rural region of Kédougou, Sénégal. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of 158 participants, 101 women and 57 men (ages 30-59) across nine non-probability-sampled communities from October 2018 through February 2019. Bivariate analysis was conducted to assess gender differences across all variables. We also conducted analyses to determine whether there were significant differences in beliefs and attitudes, by screening behavior and by education. We found significant gender differences regarding the perception of a woman's role (P < 0.001) and a man's role (P = 0.007) as well as in the everyday discrimination questions of "decreased respect by spouse" (P < 0.001). Regarding cancer stigma, among women, 18.00% disagreed and 10.00% strongly disagreed while among men, 3.6% disagreed and 1.8% strongly disagreed that "If I had cancer, I would want my family to know that I have it." When making decisions about one's healthcare, women are more likely than men to trust social contacts such as their spouse (46.5% vs 5.3%, p < 0.001) while men are more likely than women to trust health service personnel such as a nurse (50.9% vs 18.8%, p < 0.001). Furthermore, men and women were both more likely to state that men have the final decision regarding the healthcare decisions of women (p < 0.001). Our data reveal structural disadvantages for women within our study population as well as gender differences in the adapted everyday discrimination scale and cancer stigma scale. Higher rates of both personal and perceived cancer stigma among women has profound implications for how population and community level communication strategies for cancer prevention and control should be designed. Efforts to advance the goal of the elimination of cervical cancer should, in the short-term, seek to gain a more profound understanding of the ways that gender, language, and other social determinants impact negative social influences and other barriers addressable through interventions. Social and behavior change communication may be one approach that can focus both on education while seeking to leverage the social influences that exist in achieving immediate and long-term goals.

Highlights

  • [7] Cervical cancer is both preventable and concentrated in lowand middle-income countries (LMICs) [8] with over 85% of global cervical cancer deaths occurring in LMICs

  • [12] In addition, when women are empowered, their increased decision-making autonomy and access to economic resources have a positive effect on their use of healthcare services. [13,14] perceived discrimination reduces the likelihood of seeking cervical cancer screenings, [15] and shame and stigma limits women’s overall use of health services. [12]

  • We found significant gender differences for those who would not feel comfortable around someone with cancer (P < 0.001), concerning perceptions of cancer patients being normal (P < 0.001), the need to prioritize the needs of people with cancer (P < 0.001), perceptions of a cancer diagnosis being the fault of the individual (P < 0.001), that cancer is more frightening than other diseases (P < 0.001), and that women worry about getting cancer (P < 0.001)

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Summary

Introduction

There are over half a million cervical cancer cases diagnosed annually making it the third most common cancer in women worldwide. [1] it is the leading cause of female cancer deaths in Senegal with an estimated 1,876 cervical cancer cases diagnosed annually with 1,367 deaths resulting in a age-standardized mortality rate of 29.1 compared to 6.9 globally. [2] The age-standardized cervical cancer incidence rate in North America is 7.6/100,00 women compared to 23/100,000 in Western Africa and 37.8/100,000 in Senegal, ranking it the 17th highest incidence in the world. [3,4] Despite the effectiveness of cervical cancer screening and treatment in reducing incidence and mortality, [5] the estimated participation rate for cervical cancer screening in Senegal is very low (6.9% of all women ages 18 to 69). [16,17,21,24,26] For example, a study found male-female differences on effective strategies to increase HPV vaccine acceptability: for men, it was most effective to correct misconceptions, promote healthcare provider recommendations, and emphasize perceived benefits, whereas for women, it was more important to address gender norms and discrimination. [29,30,31] In these ways, negative social influences play a role in spreading negative behaviors [29,32] and may be linked to cervical cancer screening hesitancy Understanding how these factors contribute to the acceptability and adoption of cervical cancer prevention is of paramount importance. Our study analyzed gender differences on perceptions of gender roles, discrimination, cancer attitudes, cancer stigma, and influences in healthcare decision making within our study population

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