AI Article Synopsis

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women show lower participation rates in Australia's National Cervical Screening Program, with under-screened women's experiences often overlooked in research.
  • The study involved 29 under-screened women who discussed barriers to screening through the Indigenous method of Yarning, which fosters trust and safe dialogue.
  • Key themes identified included feelings of distress and trauma related to screening, issues around privacy and control, negative experiences with healthcare providers, and the impact of communication style, highlighting the importance of trauma-informed care and self-collection options for improving participation.

Article Abstract

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women have lower participation in Australia's National Cervical Screening Program than other Australian women. Under-screened (including never screened) women's voices are rarely heard in research evidence, despite being a priority group for interventions to increase cervical screening participation. This study aimed to describe under-screened Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women's perspectives on cervical screening. Participants were 29 under-screened (women who had either never screened, had not screened in the previous five years or had recently screened in the past three months after more than five years) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women from five communities across three states/territories. Female Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander researchers Yarned with women about why they did not participate in screening and how to improve screening. Yarning is an Indigenous qualitative research method in which relationships and trust facilitate culturally safe conversation. Transcripts were analysed thematically. The proportion of eligible women who screened within 30 days after the Yarn was calculated. We identified four themes describing how the harms outweighed the benefits of cervical screening for under-screened women. These were: 1) distress, discomfort, and trauma; 2) lack of privacy and control; 3) complicated relationships with health care providers (HCPs); and 4) pressured, insensitive, and/or culturally unsafe communication from HCPs. Under-screened women who had recently screened had maintained privacy and control through self-collection and had experienced trauma-informed and empathetic care from their HCPs. While we cannot unequivocally attribute women's subsequent participation in screening to their involvement in this study, it is notable that one third of eligible under-screened women were screened within 30 days after the Yarn. Enhancing privacy, implementing trauma-informed approaches to care and sensitivity to the clinician-client relationship dynamics could enhance women's sense of comfort in, and control over, the screening procedure. The opportunity to Yarn about cervical screening and self-collection may address these issues and support progress toward cervical cancer elimination in Australia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9432770PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0271658PLOS

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