학술논문

Development of a culturally sensitive narrative intervention to promote genetic counseling among African American women at risk for hereditary breast cancer.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cancer (0008543X). Jul2021, Vol. 127 Issue 14, p2535-2544. 10p.
Subject
*AFRICAN American women
*GENETIC counseling
*BREAST cancer
*GENETIC engineering
*PRIMARY care
Language
ISSN
0008-543X
Abstract
BACKGROUND: African American women with hereditary breast cancer risk are less likely to undergo genetic counseling and testing compared with non‐Hispanic White women. Inequities in the use of precision cancer care are likely to exacerbate racial disparities in cancer outcomes. A culturally sensitive multimedia narrative intervention was developed to motivate African American women at risk for hereditary breast cancer to engage in genetic counseling. METHODS: Development of the intervention was grounded in the Integrative Model of Behavioral Prediction using a phenomenological, deductive approach and employed multiple qualitative methods for data collection, including 1‐on‐1 interviews and story circles with members of the target audience to identify salient themes and lived experiences. Focus group testing was then conducted with members of the group of focus, primary care providers, and community stakeholders. RESULTS: Six themes that mapped to the theoretical model were identified. Lived experiences were abstracted from story circle data to create a narrative storyline. Educational content and motivational messaging derived from the 6 themes were embedded into the script. Focus group testing with stakeholder groups was used to refine the intervention. Testing of the final multimedia narrative with focus groups indicated that the intervention was culturally sensitive and authentic, and the messaging was effective. CONCLUSIONS: Multiple qualitative data collection methods and a robust theoretical framework of health behavior were key elements for this study to develop a culturally sensitive, narrative intervention that reflects lived experiences and motivates underserved African American women with hereditary breast cancer risk to engage in genetic counseling. This strategy can be applied to mitigate racial inequities in the use of other genomic approaches for personalizing cancer care. African American women at risk for hereditary breast cancer syndromes are half as likely to receive genetic counseling and testing compared with non‐Hispanic White women, yet they are 39% more likely to die from breast cancer. Employing culturally sensitive, theoretically driven, narrative interventions may increase usage of genomic approaches for personalizing cancer care and mitigate cancer disparities among underserved minority individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]