Paramedical professionals play an important role in the early diagnosis of breast cancer. We, therefore, conducted a study with the aim of evaluating the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of nurses and midwives of the CSPS of Ouagadougou on the symptoms suggestive of breast cancer. This cross-sectional descriptive study took place in the CSPSs of the city of Ouagadougou health districts from September 03, 2020, to February 03, 2021. The study included 400 nurses and midwives working at the CSPSs of the city of Ouagadougou, present during the interviewers’ visit, and who had agreed to participate freely and voluntarily were included in the survey. The subjects were asked to give their opinion, according to a Likert scale, about certain assertions related to symptoms of breast cancer. What would they do in front of “strongly suggestive”, “suggestive”, “neither suggestive nor suggestive”, “non- suggestive” and “not at all suggestive” symptoms of breast cancer? In our sample, there were 217 (54.3%) nurses and 183 (45.7%) midwives. Their level of knowledge was insufficient in 24.5% of cases, average in 46.25% of cases, good in 22.25% of cases, and excellent in 7% of cases. Concerning their attitudes and practices in front of symptoms considered "strongly suggestive", "suggestive", "neither suggestive nor not suggestive", "not suggestive", and "not suggestive at all", the subjects surveyed claimed to refer to a higher level of care in 96.5%, 94%, 83.7%, 62.2% and 51.5% of cases respectively. These differences were significant. Twelve subjects never referred patients, regardless of their judgment on the suggestive or non- suggestive character of the symptoms. Their average knowledge score was 4.7 points out of 10, compared to 5.7 points out of 10 for those who referred according to their judgment (p = 0.03). Measures to train and retrain nurses and midwives should make it possible to raise their level of awareness concerning breast cancer in order to ensure promptness and adequacy in the management of suspected cases of breast cancer.
Published in | Cancer Research Journal (Volume 10, Issue 4) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11 |
Page(s) | 75-80 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Breast Cancer, Symptoms Suggestive, Knowledge, Nurses, Midwives
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APA Style
Augustin Tozoula Bambara, Okobalemba Etienne Atenguena, Se Christiane Zougouri, Alice Cynthia Sama, Faycal Akanni. (2022). Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Nurses and Midwives Relating to the Symptoms Suggestive of Breast Cancer in Ouagadougou. Cancer Research Journal, 10(4), 75-80. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11
ACS Style
Augustin Tozoula Bambara; Okobalemba Etienne Atenguena; Se Christiane Zougouri; Alice Cynthia Sama; Faycal Akanni. Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Nurses and Midwives Relating to the Symptoms Suggestive of Breast Cancer in Ouagadougou. Cancer Res. J. 2022, 10(4), 75-80. doi: 10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11
AMA Style
Augustin Tozoula Bambara, Okobalemba Etienne Atenguena, Se Christiane Zougouri, Alice Cynthia Sama, Faycal Akanni. Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Nurses and Midwives Relating to the Symptoms Suggestive of Breast Cancer in Ouagadougou. Cancer Res J. 2022;10(4):75-80. doi: 10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11
@article{10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11, author = {Augustin Tozoula Bambara and Okobalemba Etienne Atenguena and Se Christiane Zougouri and Alice Cynthia Sama and Faycal Akanni}, title = {Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Nurses and Midwives Relating to the Symptoms Suggestive of Breast Cancer in Ouagadougou}, journal = {Cancer Research Journal}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {75-80}, doi = {10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.crj.20221004.11}, abstract = {Paramedical professionals play an important role in the early diagnosis of breast cancer. We, therefore, conducted a study with the aim of evaluating the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of nurses and midwives of the CSPS of Ouagadougou on the symptoms suggestive of breast cancer. This cross-sectional descriptive study took place in the CSPSs of the city of Ouagadougou health districts from September 03, 2020, to February 03, 2021. The study included 400 nurses and midwives working at the CSPSs of the city of Ouagadougou, present during the interviewers’ visit, and who had agreed to participate freely and voluntarily were included in the survey. The subjects were asked to give their opinion, according to a Likert scale, about certain assertions related to symptoms of breast cancer. What would they do in front of “strongly suggestive”, “suggestive”, “neither suggestive nor suggestive”, “non- suggestive” and “not at all suggestive” symptoms of breast cancer? In our sample, there were 217 (54.3%) nurses and 183 (45.7%) midwives. Their level of knowledge was insufficient in 24.5% of cases, average in 46.25% of cases, good in 22.25% of cases, and excellent in 7% of cases. Concerning their attitudes and practices in front of symptoms considered "strongly suggestive", "suggestive", "neither suggestive nor not suggestive", "not suggestive", and "not suggestive at all", the subjects surveyed claimed to refer to a higher level of care in 96.5%, 94%, 83.7%, 62.2% and 51.5% of cases respectively. These differences were significant. Twelve subjects never referred patients, regardless of their judgment on the suggestive or non- suggestive character of the symptoms. Their average knowledge score was 4.7 points out of 10, compared to 5.7 points out of 10 for those who referred according to their judgment (p = 0.03). Measures to train and retrain nurses and midwives should make it possible to raise their level of awareness concerning breast cancer in order to ensure promptness and adequacy in the management of suspected cases of breast cancer.}, year = {2022} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Nurses and Midwives Relating to the Symptoms Suggestive of Breast Cancer in Ouagadougou AU - Augustin Tozoula Bambara AU - Okobalemba Etienne Atenguena AU - Se Christiane Zougouri AU - Alice Cynthia Sama AU - Faycal Akanni Y1 - 2022/10/11 PY - 2022 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11 DO - 10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11 T2 - Cancer Research Journal JF - Cancer Research Journal JO - Cancer Research Journal SP - 75 EP - 80 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-8214 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20221004.11 AB - Paramedical professionals play an important role in the early diagnosis of breast cancer. We, therefore, conducted a study with the aim of evaluating the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of nurses and midwives of the CSPS of Ouagadougou on the symptoms suggestive of breast cancer. This cross-sectional descriptive study took place in the CSPSs of the city of Ouagadougou health districts from September 03, 2020, to February 03, 2021. The study included 400 nurses and midwives working at the CSPSs of the city of Ouagadougou, present during the interviewers’ visit, and who had agreed to participate freely and voluntarily were included in the survey. The subjects were asked to give their opinion, according to a Likert scale, about certain assertions related to symptoms of breast cancer. What would they do in front of “strongly suggestive”, “suggestive”, “neither suggestive nor suggestive”, “non- suggestive” and “not at all suggestive” symptoms of breast cancer? In our sample, there were 217 (54.3%) nurses and 183 (45.7%) midwives. Their level of knowledge was insufficient in 24.5% of cases, average in 46.25% of cases, good in 22.25% of cases, and excellent in 7% of cases. Concerning their attitudes and practices in front of symptoms considered "strongly suggestive", "suggestive", "neither suggestive nor not suggestive", "not suggestive", and "not suggestive at all", the subjects surveyed claimed to refer to a higher level of care in 96.5%, 94%, 83.7%, 62.2% and 51.5% of cases respectively. These differences were significant. Twelve subjects never referred patients, regardless of their judgment on the suggestive or non- suggestive character of the symptoms. Their average knowledge score was 4.7 points out of 10, compared to 5.7 points out of 10 for those who referred according to their judgment (p = 0.03). Measures to train and retrain nurses and midwives should make it possible to raise their level of awareness concerning breast cancer in order to ensure promptness and adequacy in the management of suspected cases of breast cancer. VL - 10 IS - 4 ER -