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Evaluating female nursing students' knowledge and attitudes regarding breast self-examination
16
Citations
25
References
2017
Year
NursingPreventive MedicineFemale Nursing StudentsHealth PromotionNursing ResearchEducationPatient EducationNursing StudentsBreast CancerPublic HealthCancer EducationMedicineBse KnowledgeSelf-assessmentHealth EducationWomen's Health
The purpose of this study was to evaluate female nursing students' knowledge and attitudes regarding breast self-examination (BSE). The sample consisted of 175 nursing students from a university in Cyprus. We collected data via a questionnaire that included the Greek version of the Champion Health Belief Model scale and questions regarding the participants' demographic characteristics. More than half of the participants (58.3%) said that they were knowledgeable about BSE and 29.1% of them had been taught about it during their studies. Nevertheless, 59.9% reported never having performed BSE, while 40.1% had performed it at least once. Only 10.9% of the students performed BSE every month for more than a year. Self-confidence had a positive and significant correlation (0.86) with BSE frequency. Also, we found quite a low level of BSE knowledge and practice levels, and this highlights the need for establishing breast cancer prevention programs.
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