Socio‐Economic Inequalities in Beliefs About Cancer and its Causes: Evidence From two Population Surveys
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Galicia Pacheco, Sergio Iván; Catena Martínez, Andrés; Sánchez, María José; Rueda Cuerva, María Del Rosario; Aljarilla Sánchez, Lucas; Costas, Laura; Garrido del Águila, Dunia; García Retamero Imedio, María Del Rocío; Espina, Carolina; Rodríguez-Barranco, Miguel; Petrova, DafinaEditorial
Wiley Online Library
Materia
beliefs cancer cancer awareness
Date
2024-12-03Referencia bibliográfica
Galicia Pacheco, S.I. et. al. Psycho‐Oncology, 2024; 33:e70035. [https://doi.org/10.1002/pon.70035]
Patrocinador
Spanish Association against Cancer (High‐Resolution Study of Social Inequalities in Cancer (HiReSIC), PROYE20023SÁNC); Cancer Epidemiological Surveillance Subprogram of the CIBER of Epidemiology and Public Health and the Health Institute Carlos III (VICA); CIBERESP CB06/02/0073, 2021SGR01354 and PI18/01593 EU/FEDER; Ministry of Science and Innovation (PDC2022‐133293‐100, CEX2020‐001105‐M/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 Spain); Strategic Action in Health (DTS23/00032, Spain); Mexican Government through the CONAHCYT scholarship program “Becas de Posgrado para Maestrías y Doctorados en Ciencias y Humanidades en el extranjero 2024”; Miguel Servet Fellowship (CP23/00024) from the Health Institute Carlos III; Universidad de Granada /CBUARésumé
Objective: People's beliefs about cancer can affect the actions they take to prevent and detect the disease. We investigated socioeconomic
inequalities in beliefs about cancer and its causes in the general population.
Methods: We analyzed data from the representative probabilistic Spanish Oncobarometer survey (N = 4769, 2020) and the nonprobabilistic
weight‐corrected Spanish Cancer Awareness Survey (N = 1029, 2022). Beliefs about cancer, recognition of cancer
symptoms, and recognition of risk factors were measured with the Awareness and Beliefs about Cancer questionnaire.
Endorsement of mythical causes was measured with the CAM‐Mythical Causes questionnaire. The effects of socio‐economic
status (SES) were investigated in multiple regression analyses adjusted for age, sex, and personal and family cancer history.
Results: Individuals with lower SES were more likely to endorse pessimistic beliefs (e.g., “cancer is a death sentence”), and less
likely to endorse optimistic beliefs about cancer (e.g., “people with cancer continue with normal activities”). Individuals with
lower SES also recognized fewer cancer symptoms and risk factors and endorsed more mythical causes of cancer. The gap in
knowledge regarding cancer causes was wider among people with low SES, who were more likely to endorse several mythical
causes than some established risk factors included in cancer prevention recommendations.
Conclusions: Socio‐economic inequalities in beliefs about cancer are robust and multidimensional and indicate worse preparedness
to act against the disease among lower socio‐economic groups. Differences in beliefs about disease outcomes and causes are likely one of the multiple contributors to cancer disparities and should be targeted and monitored in prevention
efforts.