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Title
Health care workers' experiences with implementation of "screen and treat" for cervical cancer prevention in Malawi: A qualitative study. |
Full text
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/00b6p37f |
Date
2020 |
Author(s)
Moucheraud, Corrina; Kawale, Paul; Kafwafwa, Savel; Bastani, Roshan; Hoffman, Risa M |
Abstract
BackgroundCervical cancer remains a major cause of mortality and morbidity in low- and middle-income countries, despite the availability of effective prevention approaches. "Screen and treat" (a single-visit strategy to identify and remove abnormal cervical cells) is the recommended secondary prevention approach in low-resource settings, but there has been relatively scarce robust implementation science evidence on barriers and facilitators to providing "screen and treat" from the provider perspective, or about thermocoagulation as a lesion removal technique.MethodsInformed by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), we conducted interviews with ten experienced "screen and treat" providers in Malawi. We asked questions based on the CFIR Guide, used the CFIR Guide codebook for a descriptive analysis in NVivo, and added recommended modifications for studies in low-income settings.ResultsSeven CFIR constructs were identified as positively influencing implementation, and six as negatively influencing implementation. The two strong positive influences were the relative advantage of thermocoagulation versus cryotherapy (Innovation Characteristics) and respondents' knowledge and beliefs about providing "screen and treat" (Individual Characteristics). The two strong negative influences were the availability of ongoing refresher trainings to stay up-to-date on skills (Inner Setting, Implementation Climate) and insufficient resources (staffing, infrastructure, supplies) to provide "screen and treat" to all women who need it (Inner Setting, Readiness for Implementation). Weak positive factors included perceived scalability and access to knowledge/information, as well as compatibility, leadership engagement, and team characteristics, but these latter three were mixed in valence. Weak negative influences were structural characteristics and donor priorities; and mixed but weakly negative influences were relative priority and engaging clients. Cross-cutting themes included the importance of broad buy-in (including different cadres of health workers and leadership at the facility and in the government) and the opportunities and challenges of offering integrated care (screening plus other services).ConclusionsAlthough "screen and treat" is viewed as effective and important, many implementation barriers remain. Our findings suggest that implementation strategies will need to be multi-level, include a diverse set of stakeholders, and explicitly address both screening and treatment. |
Subject(s)
CFIR; Cervical cancer; Global health; Screening; Clinical Research; Health Services; Prevention; Good Health and Well Being |
Coverage
112 |
Publisher
eScholarship, University of California |
Type of publication
article |
Format
application/pdf |
Source
Implementation science communications, vol 1, iss 1 |
Rights
public |
Identifier
qt00b6p37f |
Repository
Berkeley - University of California
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Added to C-A: 2022-08-31;09:39:52 |
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