Factors Associated with Colorectal Cancer Screening among Younger African American Men: A Systematic Review.

Charles R Rogers, Patricia Goodson, Margaret J Foster
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Abstract

Of cancers affecting both men and women, colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cancer killer among African Americans in the U.S. Compared to White men, African American men have incidence and mortality rates 25% and 50% higher from CRC. Despite the benefits of early detection and the availability of effective screening, most adults over age 50 have not undergone testing, and disparities in colorectal cancer screening (CRCS) persist. Owing to CRC's high incidence and younger age at presentation among African American men, CRCS is warranted at age 45 rather than 50. However, the factors influencing young adult (i.e., age < 50) African American men's intention to screen and/or their CRCS behaviors has not been systematically assessed. To assess whether the factors influencing young adult African American men's screening intentions and behaviors are changeable through structured health education interventions, we conducted a systematic review, with the two-fold purpose of: (1) synthesizing studies examining African American men's knowledge, beliefs, and behaviors regarding CRCS; and (2) assessing these studies' methodological quality. Utilizing Garrard's Matrix Method, a total of 28 manuscripts met our inclusion/exclusion criteria: 20 studies followed a non-experimental research design, 4 comprised a quasi-experimental design, and 4, an experimental design. Studies were published between 2002 and 2012; the majority, between 2007 and 2011. The factors most frequently assessed were behaviors (79%), beliefs (68%), and knowledge (61%) of CRC and CRCS. Six factors associated with CRC and CRCS emerged: previous CRCS, CRC test preference, perceived benefits, perceived barriers, CRC/CRCS knowledge, and physician support/recommendation. Studies were assigned a methodological quality score (MQS - ranging from 0 to 21). The mean MQS of 10.9 indicated these studies were, overall, of medium quality and suffered from specific flaws. Alongside a call for more rigorous research, this review provides important suggestions for practice and culturally relevant interventions.

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非裔美国年轻男性结直肠癌筛查相关因素:系统综述
在影响男性和女性的癌症中,结直肠癌(CRC)是美国非洲裔美国人的第二大癌症杀手。与白人男性相比,非洲裔美国男性的CRC发病率和死亡率分别高出25%和50%。尽管早期发现和有效筛查有好处,但大多数50岁以上的成年人没有接受过检测,结直肠癌筛查(CRCS)的差异仍然存在。由于CRC在非裔美国男性中的发病率高且发病年龄小,因此CRC在45岁而不是50岁时得到保证。然而,影响年轻成年(即年龄< 50岁)非裔美国男性筛查意愿和/或其CRCS行为的因素尚未得到系统评估。为了评估影响年轻成年非裔美国男性筛查意愿和行为的因素是否可以通过结构化的健康教育干预来改变,我们进行了一项系统回顾,其目的有两方面:(1)综合研究非洲裔美国男性关于CRCS的知识、信念和行为;(2)评估这些研究的方法学质量。利用Garrard’s Matrix法,共有28篇论文符合我们的纳入/排除标准:20篇研究采用非实验研究设计,4篇研究采用准实验设计,4篇研究采用实验设计。研究发表于2002年至2012年之间;大多数发生在2007年到2011年之间。最常被评估的因素是CRC和CRCS的行为(79%)、信念(68%)和知识(61%)。六个与CRC和CRCS相关的因素出现:既往CRCS, CRC测试偏好,感知益处,感知障碍,CRC/CRCS知识和医生支持/推荐。研究被分配一个方法学质量评分(MQS -范围从0到21)。平均MQS为10.9,表明这些研究总体上质量中等,存在特定缺陷。除了呼吁进行更严格的研究外,这篇综述还为实践和与文化相关的干预措施提供了重要建议。
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