Perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya

Background: Cancers are leading cause of death in developed nations and the second leading cause of death in developing nations. One of the most frequently diagnosed cancers among men is Prostate cancer (PCa) Objective: This research study aimed at exploring the patient?s and family?s perceptions to...

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Main Authors: Timothy Kinoti Kirungia, Consolata Kirigia, Lucy Gitonga, Silas Kiruki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut Ilmu Kesehatan STRADA Indonesia 2021-04-01
Series:Journal of Nursing Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://thejnp.org/index.php/jnp/article/view/126
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spelling doaj-fb112dd687134c4288937e98eaef919b2021-04-01T09:46:12ZengInstitut Ilmu Kesehatan STRADA IndonesiaJournal of Nursing Practice2614-34882614-34962021-04-014215416610.30994/jnp.v4i2.126103Perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, KenyaTimothy Kinoti Kirungia0Consolata Kirigia1Lucy Gitonga2Silas Kiruki3Kenya Medical Training College, Chuka, KenyaUniversity of EmbuChuka University, Chuka, KenyaChuka University, Chuka, KenyaBackground: Cancers are leading cause of death in developed nations and the second leading cause of death in developing nations. One of the most frequently diagnosed cancers among men is Prostate cancer (PCa) Objective: This research study aimed at exploring the patient?s and family?s perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya. Methods: The study population comprised of families and PCa patients attending Chogoria mission hospital, Magutuni sub-county hospital, Chuka county hospital and Tharaka sub-county hospital which were selected purposefully, from which a sample of 70 patients and 65  family members was obtained. Purposive sampling method was used to sample patients and families. Data were collected using interview schedules and focus group discussions and summarized using descriptive statistics. Statistical analysis for association between variables was done using chi-square tests.   Results: The study revealed that; men in the age group 60-70 were most prone to the development of prostate cancer. A high percentage of patients and families perceived that prostate cancer was caused by genetic factors and should be treated by medical personnel. Over 50% of the patients and families had no idea of the symptoms of prostate cancer neither had they heard of it before the patient was diagnosed. The study also revealed that 50% of  the patients suffered hypertension, 80% did not believe the diagnosis at first and over 50% perceived the diagnosis as a death sentence. PCa patients showed the highest level of acceptance and lung cancer patients the poorest acceptance of illness. Over 90% of the patients and families observed general health improvement after medication. Over 78% of the patients and family?s had embraced insurance as a way of meeting the medical expenses. Conclusion: This study demonstrated that patients and families perceived the diagnosis of prostate cancer as a death sentence. They also had low level of knowledge about PCa. A strong correlation was demonstrated between family history and increased risk of PCa. However, it was demonstrated that family history of PCa did not increase levels of knowledge on the causes of PCa.http://thejnp.org/index.php/jnp/article/view/126perceptionsdiagnosisprostate canceroutcomespatientsfamily’s
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Timothy Kinoti Kirungia
Consolata Kirigia
Lucy Gitonga
Silas Kiruki
spellingShingle Timothy Kinoti Kirungia
Consolata Kirigia
Lucy Gitonga
Silas Kiruki
Perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya
Journal of Nursing Practice
perceptions
diagnosis
prostate cancer
outcomes
patients
family’s
author_facet Timothy Kinoti Kirungia
Consolata Kirigia
Lucy Gitonga
Silas Kiruki
author_sort Timothy Kinoti Kirungia
title Perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya
title_short Perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya
title_full Perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya
title_fullStr Perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya
title_sort perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in tharaka nithi county, kenya
publisher Institut Ilmu Kesehatan STRADA Indonesia
series Journal of Nursing Practice
issn 2614-3488
2614-3496
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Background: Cancers are leading cause of death in developed nations and the second leading cause of death in developing nations. One of the most frequently diagnosed cancers among men is Prostate cancer (PCa) Objective: This research study aimed at exploring the patient?s and family?s perceptions towards diagnosis of prostate cancer in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya. Methods: The study population comprised of families and PCa patients attending Chogoria mission hospital, Magutuni sub-county hospital, Chuka county hospital and Tharaka sub-county hospital which were selected purposefully, from which a sample of 70 patients and 65  family members was obtained. Purposive sampling method was used to sample patients and families. Data were collected using interview schedules and focus group discussions and summarized using descriptive statistics. Statistical analysis for association between variables was done using chi-square tests.   Results: The study revealed that; men in the age group 60-70 were most prone to the development of prostate cancer. A high percentage of patients and families perceived that prostate cancer was caused by genetic factors and should be treated by medical personnel. Over 50% of the patients and families had no idea of the symptoms of prostate cancer neither had they heard of it before the patient was diagnosed. The study also revealed that 50% of  the patients suffered hypertension, 80% did not believe the diagnosis at first and over 50% perceived the diagnosis as a death sentence. PCa patients showed the highest level of acceptance and lung cancer patients the poorest acceptance of illness. Over 90% of the patients and families observed general health improvement after medication. Over 78% of the patients and family?s had embraced insurance as a way of meeting the medical expenses. Conclusion: This study demonstrated that patients and families perceived the diagnosis of prostate cancer as a death sentence. They also had low level of knowledge about PCa. A strong correlation was demonstrated between family history and increased risk of PCa. However, it was demonstrated that family history of PCa did not increase levels of knowledge on the causes of PCa.
topic perceptions
diagnosis
prostate cancer
outcomes
patients
family’s
url http://thejnp.org/index.php/jnp/article/view/126
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