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Ethiopian women's breast cancer self-examination practices and associated factors. A systematic review and meta-analysis

Authors :
Samuel Derbie Habtegiorgis
Daniel Shitu Getahun
Animut Takele Telayneh
Molla Yigzaw Birhanu
Tesfa Mengie Feleke
Alemu Basazn Mingude
Lemma Getacher
Source :
Cancer epidemiology. 78
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Breast neoplasm is the most frequently diagnosed and the leading cause of cancer death in the vast majority of the countries. Breast cancer self-examination is a check-up of a woman does at home to look for changes or problems in the breast tissue. The benefit of early recognition is for early treatment that is more effective, higher long-term survival rates and better quality of life. The aim of this review was to determine the pooled prevalence of breast cancer self-examination practice and identify its associated factors among Ethiopian women.Google Scholar, PubMed, Science Direct, web of science, and Cochrane Library were used for search of articles. This review includes thirty four articles conducted in Ethiopia between 2011 and 2020. The review contains 14,908 women to determine the ever pooled prevalence of breast cancer self-examination practice. Health workers and students made up 28.35% of the total participants. Data were extracted using a standardized data extraction format prepared in Microsoft Excel and analyzed with Stata 14. To assess heterogeneity IIn Ethiopian women, the overall ever and regular pooled breast cancer self-examination practice was 36% (95% CI: 28, 43) and 16% (95% CI: 28, 43) respectively. The ever pooled prevalence for health workers or students was 53% (95% CI: 41, 65), whereas for other participants it was 25% (95% CI: 19, 30). Good knowledge about breast self-examination (AOR: 3.69: 95% CI: 2.70, 5.05), positive attitude towards BCSE (AOR: 2.72: 95% CI: 1.74, 4.24), Getting to know people with breast cancer(AOR: 2.77: 95% CI: 1.51, 5.09), family history of breast cancer (AOR: 2.49: 95% CI: 1.60, 3.88) and personal history of breast cancer (AOR: 2.26: 95% CI: 1.70, 3.01) were associated factors to BCSE practice among Ethiopian women. All of the studies included in this review were conducted in a cross-sectional design was a limitation of this review and meta-analysis.This review and meta-analysis showed the ever and regular pooled prevalence of BCSE among Ethiopian women. More than one third of Ethiopian women ever practiced BCSE. We recommend that awareness creation should be perform in order to tackle the risk of breast cancer.

Details

ISSN :
1877783X
Volume :
78
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer epidemiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5b187fcc4ea08a41e18547bfde6c345c