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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 3/2009

01-03-2009 | Original Article

Cancer Prevention Knowledge of People with Profound Hearing Loss

Authors: Philip Zazove, MD, Helen E. Meador, PhD, Barbara D. Reed, MD, MSPH, Ananda Sen, PhD, Daniel W. Gorenflo, PhD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 3/2009

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Abstract

BACKGROUND

Deaf persons, a documented minority population, have low reading levels and difficulty communicating with physicians. The effect of these on their knowledge of cancer prevention recommendations is unknown.

METHODS

A cross-sectional study of 222 d/Deaf persons in Michigan, age 18 and older, chose one of four ways (voice, video of a certified American Sign Language interpreter, captions, or printed English) to complete a self-administered computer video questionnaire about demographics, hearing loss, language history, health-care utilization, and health-care information sources, as well as family and social variables. Twelve questions tested their knowledge of cancer prevention recommendations. The outcome measures were the percentage of correct answers to the questions and the association of multiple variables with these responses.

RESULTS

Participants averaged 22.9% correct answers with no gender difference. Univariate analysis revealed that smoking history, types of medical problems, last physician visit, and women having previous cancer preventive tests did not affect scores. Improved scores occurred with computer use (p = 0.05), higher education (p < 0.01) and income (p = 0.01), hearing spouses (p < 0.01), speaking English in multiple situations (p < 0.001), and in men with previous prostate cancer testing (p = 0.04). Obtaining health information from books (p = 0.05), physicians (p = 0.008), nurses (p = 0.03) or the internet (p = 0.02), and believing that smoking is bad (p < 0.001) also improved scores. Multivariate analysis revealed that English use (p = 0.01) and believing that smoking was bad (p = 0.05) were associated with improved scores.

CONCLUSION

Persons with profound hearing loss have poor knowledge of recommended cancer prevention interventions. English use in multiple settings was strongly associated with increased knowledge.
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Metadata
Title
Cancer Prevention Knowledge of People with Profound Hearing Loss
Authors
Philip Zazove, MD
Helen E. Meador, PhD
Barbara D. Reed, MD, MSPH
Ananda Sen, PhD
Daniel W. Gorenflo, PhD
Publication date
01-03-2009
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 3/2009
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-008-0895-3

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