1. Mobile health-delivered narrative intervention to increase cervical cancer screening among Malawian women living with HIV: A pilot randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Lee H, Mtengezo JT, Makin MS, Shi L, Malata A, Fitzpatrick J, Ngoma J, Zhang L, Larkey L, Stuart-Shor E, Mlombe Y, and Kim D
- Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to develop and evaluate a mobile health (mHealth)-delivered, theory-guided, culturally tailored storytelling narrative (STN) intervention to increase cervical cancer screening among Malawian women living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)., Methods: This study involved two phases: Phase 1: development of a theory-guided and culturally adapted STN intervention and Phase 2: a pilot randomized controlled trial was conducted. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three arms: Arm 1: tablet-based video (mHealth) with STN ( n = 60); Arm 2: mHealth with a video of nonnarrative educational materials ( n = 59); and Arm 3: control group with only reading nonnarrative educational materials in person ( n = 60). Cervical cancer screening was measured using visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) uptakes by self-report and health passport record review at 2 and 6 months after intervention., Results: Both arms 1 and 2 had nearly twice the rate of VIA uptakes than those in Arm 3 (51.0% and 50.0%, respectively, vs. 35.0%, P = 0.01) at 2 months follow-up, but there were no differences among groups from 2- to 6-month follow-ups. All groups demonstrated significant improvement of knowledge about risk factors, intention, and VIA uptakes., Conclusions: The findings demonstrate the preliminary effectiveness of the intervention on cervical cancer screening behavior and the feasibility of the study regarding recruitment, retention, treatment fidelity, and acceptability of the single 30-min session. The feasibility and the preliminary results of the effectiveness of the proposed study indicate scaling up the STN intervention to a larger population of women to increase cervical cancer screening uptake to prevent deaths due to cervical cancer in Malawi., Competing Interests: All authors declare no conflicts of interest. Professor Haeok Lee, the corresponding author, serves on the editorial board of the Asia-Pacific Journal of Oncology Nursing. The article underwent standard review procedures of the journal, with peer review conducted independently of Professor Lee and their research groups., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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