Co-production of a novel intervention targeting obesity-related barriers to mammographic screening participation.

IF 2.5 Q2 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING Radiography Pub Date : 2024-11-19 DOI:10.1016/j.radi.2024.11.005
E Dzidzornu, A O'Fee, S Hogan, N S McCarthy, E Stewart, C Madeley, J Wilkes, A White, M Hickey, E Wylie, K McBride, J Stone
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Abstract

Introduction: Women with obesity are less likely to participate in mammographic screening and more likely to develop post-menopausal breast cancer. We describe the co-production of a novel training intervention for breast screening staff, targeting obesity-related barriers to participating in a population-based mammographic screening.

Methods: A Stakeholder Consultant Group (SCG) was established to guide the co-production process. A narrative review of the literature was conducted, as well as first person interviews of women with lived experience of obesity, to identify/inform themes for service delivery staff training.

Results: Three themes from the narrative review emerged: (i) enhanced staff-client communication, (ii) promoting compassionate connections during client interactions (iii) tailored mammography positioning for women with obesity. Iterative co-design and consultation with the SCG resulted in six key sessions delivered within an in-service training day: determinants of obesity, weight stigma and healthcare, screening challenges for women living with obesity, empathy 'mapping', front-line training for reception staff, and screening challenges for radiographers when screening women with obesity. Subsequent practical workshops for radiographers provided hands-on positioning training using a real-life model and a 'mammo vest'. Feedback showed that 74 % of staff rated the training as "very good" or "excellent".

Conclusion: Training to improve staff interactions with women with obesity appears to be acceptable.

Implications for practice: The intervention has been successfully implemented in a population-based breast screening program to improve the mammography experience for both clients and staff. Improving the mammogram experience will improve the likelihood of clients returning to screening when next due. Given the prevalence of obesity and body image issues, targeted interventions that optimize client interactions could significantly reduce breast cancer mortality through early detection.

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针对乳房 X 线照相筛查中与肥胖有关的障碍,共同制定一项新的干预措施。
导言:患有肥胖症的妇女不太可能参加乳房X光筛查,而且更有可能罹患绝经后乳腺癌。我们介绍了针对乳腺筛查工作人员的新型培训干预措施的共同制作过程,该干预措施针对的是与肥胖有关的、阻碍参与基于人群的乳腺X光筛查的障碍:方法:成立了利益相关者顾问小组(SCG)来指导共同制作过程。对文献进行了叙述性回顾,并对有肥胖经历的妇女进行了第一人称访谈,以确定服务人员培训的主题:结果:从叙事回顾中发现了三个主题:(i)加强工作人员与客户的沟通;(ii)在与客户的互动中促进情感联系;(iii)为肥胖妇女量身定制乳房 X 射线照相定位。通过与 SCG 的反复共同设计和协商,在一个在职培训日中开设了六个关键课程:肥胖的决定因素、体重耻辱化与医疗保健、肥胖妇女筛查面临的挑战、移情 "绘图"、接待人员的一线培训以及放射技师在筛查肥胖妇女时面临的筛查挑战。随后为放射技师举办的实践研讨会利用真实模型和 "乳腺背心 "提供了定位实践培训。反馈显示,74% 的员工将培训评为 "非常好 "或 "优秀":结论:通过培训改善工作人员与肥胖妇女的互动似乎是可以接受的:该干预措施已在一项基于人群的乳腺筛查项目中成功实施,以改善客户和工作人员的乳房 X 光检查体验。改善乳房 X 射线照相体验将提高受检者在下一次到期时重返筛查的可能性。鉴于肥胖和身体形象问题的普遍性,有针对性的干预措施可以优化客户互动,通过早期检测大大降低乳腺癌死亡率。
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来源期刊
Radiography
Radiography RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
34.60%
发文量
169
审稿时长
63 days
期刊介绍: Radiography is an International, English language, peer-reviewed journal of diagnostic imaging and radiation therapy. Radiography is the official professional journal of the College of Radiographers and is published quarterly. Radiography aims to publish the highest quality material, both clinical and scientific, on all aspects of diagnostic imaging and radiation therapy and oncology.
期刊最新文献
"I used their criticisms as my weapon to succeed" Experiences in the dual learning environment of Black, Asian, and ethnically diverse therapeutic radiographer undergraduate students - results of a UK survey. Radiographers' perspective of patient safety at ultrasound units in radiology departments. Uniformity test in three-dimensional rotational angiography: Novel tools and methods for advanced performance evaluation. Co-production of a novel intervention targeting obesity-related barriers to mammographic screening participation. Communicating the risk of recall in mammography screening - Enskilment in breast radiography.
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