Public knowledge, beliefs and practices in Greece about cancer etiology and prevention

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Abstract

This questionnaire survey of the parents of elementary schoolchildren in Greece assessed their self-reported knowledge, attitudes and practices towards smoking, diet and exposure to X-radiation. A random sample of 403 household units (379 fathers and 391 mothers) was selected from urban areas of Thessaloniki. Half of the parents who smoked (50.1%) did not ask for permission to smoke from other people and 66.0% regularly smoked in front of their children. On the other hand, 82.6% of smokers recognized the existence of a health risk to children from passive smoking. Parents overestimated the role of nuclear tests and accidents as factors in carcinogenesis. Two-thirds of parents did not know the beneficial role of the Mediterranean diet to health, and dietary intake analysis showed some departure from the traditional Mediterranean diet. A reconsideration of the policy regarding health education programmes concerning cancer prevention in Greece is needed.

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Charalabopoulos, K., Makris, G., Charalabopoulos, A., Golias, C., & Athanasiou, K. (2011). Public knowledge, beliefs and practices in Greece about cancer etiology and prevention. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 17(5), 392–397. https://doi.org/10.26719/2011.17.5.392

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