Changing the Attitudes and Behaviors of Black Men to Screening for Prostate Cancer
Abstract
The objectives of the project are a) to explore the prevailing attitudes toward screening for prostate cancer among Black men in the Cape Fear region of North Carolina b) to determine the comparative effectiveness of a one-time presentation of information advocating prostate cancer screening to that of repeated presentation of the message, and c) to determine the characteristics and impact of the agent of information delivery on the attitudes and behaviors of Black men toward screening for prostate cancer. The study involves the presentation of uniform messages advocating the benefits of prostate cancer screening to a group of 120 Black men 40 years and older who have never screened for prostate cancer, not participated in a prostate cancer screening education program. Researchers, health professionals, and peer facilitators will deliver educational messages once to one group, and three times to a second group. The comparison of attitudes before exposure to the messages to that after exposure will help determine the impact of the program on attitudes in the groups. The number of men screened following exposure to the messages will determine the impact of the program on behavior change. The study is at the stage of recruiting eligible individuals for participation in the project.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Mar 01, 2002
- Accession Number
- ADA406116
Entities
People
- Maxwell Twum
Organizations
- Fayetteville State University