Publication | Closed Access
Increasing Melanoma Screening Among Hispanic/Latino Americans
24
Citations
10
References
2015
Year
EthnicityHealth Care DisparityMelanoma ScreeningMelanoma PreventionPopulation Health SciencesHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthRacial DisparitiesCancer DisparityRaceLatino CulturePreventive MedicineMelanoma IncidencePublic Health PracticePublic HealthVulnerable Patient PopulationHigh RiskHealth PromotionChronic Disease PreventionEpidemiologyCancer ScreeningRural HealthHealth BehaviorCommunity Health SciencesSocial EpidemiologyMedicineHealth Disparity
Melanoma incidence is increasing among Hispanics/Latinos in California. This community-based project reached out to a rural Hispanic/Latino community in North San Diego County to provide melanoma prevention and screening education. At a local community health fair, bilingual volunteer lay health workers led 10- to 15-minute-long information sessions on melanoma disease, risk factors, and skin self-examination techniques. Pearson chi-square analyses of participants' (N = 34) responses to pre- and postintervention evaluation surveys indicate significant increases in knowledge, risk awareness, and self-efficacy for self-screening. The results revealed that Hispanics/Latinos in a low socioeconomic stratum might be at moderate to high risk for developing melanoma. Their low annual income, low level of education, occupational sun-exposure, and lack of access to health care are likely factors that deter at-risk Hispanics/Latinos from seeking health care.
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