Breast Cancer Care-Seeking Behavior in Rural Bangladesh: The Role of Stigma, Gender Identity, and Violence Against Women

abstract: While women in higher income countries can expect to survive a diagnosis of breast cancer, women in lower- and middle-income countries such as Bangladesh have mortality rates near 50%, suggesting that there are significant barriers to care seeking for breast problems. Given limited literat...

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Other Authors: Steiness, Heather Lynn Story (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38549
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-385492018-06-22T03:07:11Z Breast Cancer Care-Seeking Behavior in Rural Bangladesh: The Role of Stigma, Gender Identity, and Violence Against Women abstract: While women in higher income countries can expect to survive a diagnosis of breast cancer, women in lower- and middle-income countries such as Bangladesh have mortality rates near 50%, suggesting that there are significant barriers to care seeking for breast problems. Given limited literature on barriers to care among native, rural South Asian populations, this study thus sought to understand 1) the impacts of breast problems on women and their families, including the extent of abuse among women with breast problems, and 2) the barriers and facilitators of care for women with breast problems in rural Bangladesh. Sixty-three study participants (43 women and 20 men) were interviewed about their experiences. Interviewers elicited barriers to care, facilitators of care, and questions about the attitudes and behaviors of family and community members were in structured interviews. The study found that breast problems and their treatment put significant resource and emotional strains on the family. Furthermore, over a third of women in this study reported abuse of some kind, with emotional abuse, neglect, and abandonment being the most frequently reported. The study reinforced barriers to care identified in the literature for South Asian populations, but only a quarter of participants reported stigma of any kind. Lack of knowledge about breast cancer and inability to pay for care were the most frequently reported barriers, followed by access to care and fear of treatment. Facilitators of care among women who received a biopsy point to the importance of support by the husband and husband’s family, as well as the ability to identify economic support for and knowledge about care. This study contributes to the understanding of two overarching themes: structural violence and the value of women, as well as how these themes influence poor outcomes for women with breast cancer in rural Bangladesh. Suggestions for future studies and short and long-term interventions to address study findings are offered. Dissertation/Thesis Appendix E: Study Approval Appendix B: Barriers to Care Table Appendix H: Codebook Appendix C: Study Instruments 1 Appendix C: Study Instruments 2 Steiness, Heather Lynn Story (Author) Hruschka, Daniel J (Advisor) Wutich, Amber (Committee member) Ginsburg, Ophira (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Public health Women's studies Bangladesh Barriers to Care Breast Cancer eng 227 pages Doctoral Dissertation Anthropology 2016 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38549 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2016
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Public health
Women's studies
Bangladesh
Barriers to Care
Breast Cancer
spellingShingle Public health
Women's studies
Bangladesh
Barriers to Care
Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer Care-Seeking Behavior in Rural Bangladesh: The Role of Stigma, Gender Identity, and Violence Against Women
description abstract: While women in higher income countries can expect to survive a diagnosis of breast cancer, women in lower- and middle-income countries such as Bangladesh have mortality rates near 50%, suggesting that there are significant barriers to care seeking for breast problems. Given limited literature on barriers to care among native, rural South Asian populations, this study thus sought to understand 1) the impacts of breast problems on women and their families, including the extent of abuse among women with breast problems, and 2) the barriers and facilitators of care for women with breast problems in rural Bangladesh. Sixty-three study participants (43 women and 20 men) were interviewed about their experiences. Interviewers elicited barriers to care, facilitators of care, and questions about the attitudes and behaviors of family and community members were in structured interviews. The study found that breast problems and their treatment put significant resource and emotional strains on the family. Furthermore, over a third of women in this study reported abuse of some kind, with emotional abuse, neglect, and abandonment being the most frequently reported. The study reinforced barriers to care identified in the literature for South Asian populations, but only a quarter of participants reported stigma of any kind. Lack of knowledge about breast cancer and inability to pay for care were the most frequently reported barriers, followed by access to care and fear of treatment. Facilitators of care among women who received a biopsy point to the importance of support by the husband and husband’s family, as well as the ability to identify economic support for and knowledge about care. This study contributes to the understanding of two overarching themes: structural violence and the value of women, as well as how these themes influence poor outcomes for women with breast cancer in rural Bangladesh. Suggestions for future studies and short and long-term interventions to address study findings are offered. === Dissertation/Thesis === Appendix E: Study Approval === Appendix B: Barriers to Care Table === Appendix H: Codebook === Appendix C: Study Instruments 1 === Appendix C: Study Instruments 2 === Doctoral Dissertation Anthropology 2016
author2 Steiness, Heather Lynn Story (Author)
author_facet Steiness, Heather Lynn Story (Author)
title Breast Cancer Care-Seeking Behavior in Rural Bangladesh: The Role of Stigma, Gender Identity, and Violence Against Women
title_short Breast Cancer Care-Seeking Behavior in Rural Bangladesh: The Role of Stigma, Gender Identity, and Violence Against Women
title_full Breast Cancer Care-Seeking Behavior in Rural Bangladesh: The Role of Stigma, Gender Identity, and Violence Against Women
title_fullStr Breast Cancer Care-Seeking Behavior in Rural Bangladesh: The Role of Stigma, Gender Identity, and Violence Against Women
title_full_unstemmed Breast Cancer Care-Seeking Behavior in Rural Bangladesh: The Role of Stigma, Gender Identity, and Violence Against Women
title_sort breast cancer care-seeking behavior in rural bangladesh: the role of stigma, gender identity, and violence against women
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38549
_version_ 1718701080764743680