Psychological Barriers and Facilitators of Colorectal Cancer Screening: A French Qualitative Study

The aim of this qualitative study was to explore the psychological barriers to and facilitators of undergoing the Hemoccult-II® colorectal cancer screening test in France. Sixty-nine French people aged 50 to 74 years were divided into seven qualitative focus groups. Three issues were discussed with...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inHealth psychology research Vol. 1; no. 2; p. e22
Main Authors Bridou, Morgiane, Aguerre, Colette, Gimenes, Guillaume, Kubiszewski, Violaine, Le Gall, Armel, Potard, Catherine, Sorel, Olivier, Reveillere, Christian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Open Medical Publishing 18.04.2013
PAGEPress Publications, Pavia, Italy
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Summary:The aim of this qualitative study was to explore the psychological barriers to and facilitators of undergoing the Hemoccult-II® colorectal cancer screening test in France. Sixty-nine French people aged 50 to 74 years were divided into seven qualitative focus groups. Three issues were discussed with participants: knowledge and beliefs about colorectal cancer screening; facilitators of colorectal cancer screening by Hemoccult-II®; barriers to colorectal cancer screening by Hemoccult-II®. All the discussions were led by two psychologists and were recorded, transcribed verbatim and analyzed using qualitative data analysis software. Correspondence factor analyses identified three dimensions for each topic. The main psychological facilitators of colorectal cancer screening were: information about colorectal cancer screening, perceived simplicity of using Hemoccult-II®, and perception of risk. Uncertainty about the reliability of Hemoccult-II®, health anxiety, and embarrassment emerged as the main barriers to colorectal cancer screening. Cross-sectional analyses identified the differences between the views expressed by women and men. Women appeared more embarrassed about Hemoccult-II® and men seemed to be more worried about colorectal cancer. This preliminary study suggests that psychological factors play an important role in colorectal cancer screening by Hemoccult-II®. This finding may help health organizations to conceive better awareness campaigns to promote colorectal cancer screening in order to reduce the related mortality rate by taking into account psychological determinants.
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PMCID: PMC4768581
Conflict of interests: this qualitative study is part of a broader scientific research programme investigating the psychological barriers to and facilitators of the colorectal cancer screening test (“EF-SPEED-CANCOL” study), coordinated by Colette Aguerre and funded by the French National Cancer Institute (INCa, France) following its 2010 call for projects entitled Recherche en sciences humaines et sociales, santé publique et épidémiologie (Human and social sciences research, public health and epidemiology). It was the subject of a doctoral thesis by Morgiane Bridou.
Contributions: MB, has conducted the study and wrote this article; GG, VK, ALG, CP, OS, have conducted the focus groups and corrected this article; CA, CR, have coordinated the study and corrected this article.
ISSN:2420-8124
2281-2075
2420-8124
DOI:10.4081/hpr.2013.e22