Saturday, August 22, 2015

“A Somali Girl is Muslim and Does Not Have Premarital Sex. Is Vaccination Really Necessary?” A Qualitative Study into the Perceptions of Somali Women in the Netherlands About the Prevention of Cervical Cancer

Below:  The health belief model


In this study, we have identified perceived barriers to the use of preventive measures across three major themes: (1) Somali women and preventive healthcare; (2) Language, knowledge, and negotiating decisions; and (3) Sexual standards, culture, and religion. Many issues have been identified across these themes, e.g., distrust of the Dutch health care system or being embarrassed to get Pap smears due to Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) and having a Dutch, male practitioner; or a perceived low susceptibility to HPV and cancer because of the religious norms that prohibit sex before marriage.

Current measures in the Netherlands to prevent women from developing cervical cancer hardly reach Somali women because these women perceive these kinds of preventative measures as not personally relevant. Dutch education strategies about cervical cancer deviate from ways of exchanging information within the Somali community.

Teachers can provide culturally sensitive information to young Somali women in schools. For Somali mothers, oral education (e.g., poetry or theater) about the Dutch health care system and men’s roles in HPV transmission may be useful.

An intersectional approach, grounded in the Health Belief Model (HBM), is recommended to promote equal access to preventive health care for Somali women.

Read more at:   http://ht.ly/ReLYa HT https://twitter.com/vumcamsterdam 

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