Colorectal cancer beliefs, knowledge, and screening among Filipino, Hmong, and Korean Americans

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: To the authors' knowledge, there are few studies to date regarding colorectal cancer (CRC) beliefs, knowledge, and screening among multiple Asian American populations, who are reported to have lower CRC screening rates compared with white individuals. The current study was performed to assess knowledge and beliefs regarding the causes of CRC, its prevention, and factors associated with CRC screening among 3 Asian American groups. METHODS: The authors conducted an in-language survey with Filipino (Honolulu, Hawaii), Hmong (Sacramento, California), and Korean (Los Angeles, California) Americans aged 50 to 75 years who were sampled through social networks. Bivariate and multivariable analyses were conducted to assess factors associated with CRC screening. RESULTS: The sample of 981 participants was 78.3% female and 73.8% reported limited proficiency in English. Few of the participants were aware that age (17.7%) or family history (36.3%) were risk factors for CRC; 6.2% believed fate caused CRC. Only 46.4% of participants knew that screening prevented CRC (74.3% of Filipino, 10.6% of Hmong, and 55.8% of Korean participants; P

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APA

Tran, M. T., Jeong, M. B., Nguyen, V. V., Sharp, M. T., Yu, E. P., Yu, F., … Nguyen, T. T. (2018). Colorectal cancer beliefs, knowledge, and screening among Filipino, Hmong, and Korean Americans. Cancer, 124, 1552–1559. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.31216

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