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What Prevents Men Aged 40–64 Years from Prostate Cancer Screening in Namibia?
Authors: Joseph Kangmennaang, Paul Mkandawire, and Isaac Luginaah
Source: Journal of Cancer Epidemiology, 2016(Article ID 7962502): 1-9; DOI: 10.1155/2016/7962502
Topic(s): Men's health
Country: Africa
  Namibia
Published: JAN 2016
Abstract: Objectives. Although a growing body of evidence demonstrates the public health burden of prostate cancer in SSA, relatively little is known about the underlying factors surrounding the low levels of testing for the disease in the context of this region. Using Namibia Demographic Health Survey dataset (NDHS, 2013), we examined the factors that influence men’s decision to screen for prostate cancer in Namibia. Methods. We use complementary log-log regression models to explore the determinants of screening for prostate cancer. We also corrected for the effect of unobserved heterogeneity that may affect screening behaviours at the cluster level. Results. The results show that health insurance coverage (OR = 2.95, p=0.01) is an important predictor of screening for prostate cancer in Namibia. In addition, higher education and discussing reproductive issues with a health worker (OR = 2.02, p=0.05) were more likely to screening for prostate cancer. Conclusions. A universal health insurance scheme may be necessary to increase uptake of prostate cancer screening. However it needs to be acknowledged that expanded screening can have negative consequences and any allocation of scarce resources towards screening must be guided by evidence obtained from the local context about the costs and benefits of screening.
Web: https://www.hindawi.com/journals/jce/2016/7962502/