全球癌症耻辱化研究:美国国家癌症研究所研讨会报告。

Kathryn Heley, Robin C Vanderpool, Vidya Vedham
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引用次数: 0

摘要

成见是一种社会过程,其特点是与特定属性或特征相关的负面信念、态度和成见,从而导致歧视和社会排斥。成见表现在癌症控制的各个环节,仍然是全球癌症预防和控制面临的主要挑战。在这篇评论中,我们概述了美国国家癌症研究所(NCI)全球癌症成见研究研讨会的情况,这是一个多学科国际会议,于 2022 年 9 月以虚拟方式举行,重点讨论癌症与成见的交叉问题。这次会议的独特之处在于它召集了研究人员、倡导者、临床医生、非政府组织和政府组织,他们作为一个集体,为癌症耻辱化研究界提供了首要议题、跨领域考虑因素和未来考虑方向,我们将在本文中加以介绍。总之,全面研究癌症污名化需要一种整体的、适应性的和多方面的方法,并应考虑相互关联的因素及其在全球不同文化和社会背景下的交集。总之,人们呼吁:采取一种包容性的方法,鼓励研究人员和从业人员将癌症耻辱感作为全球癌症健康不平等的驱动因素加以识别和衡量;扩展现有的研究方法,将经验、背景和观点的多样性纳入其中;不同利益相关者之间开展合作,以制定更有效的策略来减少耻辱感并改善癌症治疗效果。这些努力对于在全球范围内培养有效、公平的癌症预防和治疗方法至关重要。
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Global cancer stigma research: a U.S. National Cancer Institute workshop report.

Stigma is a social process characterized by negative beliefs, attitudes, and stereotypes associated with a specific attribute or characteristic that leads to discrimination and social exclusion. Stigma manifests across the cancer control continuum and remains a key challenge for cancer prevention and control worldwide. In this commentary, we provide an overview of the U.S. National Cancer Institute's (NCI) Global Cancer Stigma Research Workshop, a multi-disciplinary international conference held virtually in September 2022, which focused on the intersection of cancer and stigma. The meeting was unique in its convening of researchers, advocates, clinicians, and non-governmental and governmental organizations, who-as a collective-provided overarching topics, cross-cutting considerations, and future directions for the cancer stigma research community to consider, which we describe herein. In summary, studying cancer stigma comprehensively requires a holistic, adaptive, and multifaceted approach-and should consider interrelated factors and their intersection within diverse cultural and social contexts worldwide. Collectively, there was a call for: an inclusive approach, encouraging researchers and practitioners to identify and measure cancer stigma as a driver for cancer health inequities globally; an expansion of existing research methodology to include diversity of experiences, contexts, and perspectives; and collaborations among diverse stakeholders to develop more effective strategies for reducing stigma and improving cancer outcomes. Such efforts are essential to cultivating effective and equitable approaches to preventing and treating cancer worldwide.

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