News

Breast Cancer Messages Need to be Targeted Toward African-American Women, Researchers Say

by , August 25, 2005

Breast Cancer Messages Need to be Targeted Toward African-American Women, Researchers Say
Only highly educated White women responding to media messages

COLUMBIA, Mo.
African-American women are more likely than Caucasian women to be diagnosed with breast cancer at later stages of the disease and are more likely to die from the disease, according to the National Cancer Institute. Now, a University of Missouri-Columbia professor is researching how knowledge of breast cancer, gained through media use, can affect women’s health behaviors, such as performing breast self-exams or getting regular mammograms.

“From a disease prevention perspective, there is a great need for accurate information to be effectively communicated to women about breast cancer and breast cancer screening,” says Cynthia Frisby, associate advertising professor in the MU School of Journalism.
Frisby led a team of researchers in conducting a telephone survey of 240 White women and 206 African-American women to investigate differences in knowledge levels between the groups, as well as how much media use influences the level of breast cancer knowledge. Frisby also used education levels to further divide the groups into those that were highly educated and those that only had lower levels of education.

Breast cancer knowledge and healthy behavior were significantly related only for highly educated White women. For White women with low levels of education and African-American women, more knowledge did not have an affect on behavior.

Higher media use led to more knowledge of breast cancer only for highly educated African-American women, Frisby found. However, increased media use did not translate into more highly educated African-American women getting breast cancer screenings. In addition, media use and breast cancer knowledge were not significant predictors of behaviors of African-American women, which Frisby says could be an indication that mass media messages about breast cancer may be too focused on White women.

1 | 2
Comments posted here may be reprinted in Diverse: Issues In Higher Education magazine, and may be edited for purposes of clarity and/or space.




FEATURED jobs
Provost and Executive VP for Academic Affairs
The University of Toledo

The University of Toledo, a Carnegie Foundation Research University seeks a dynamic leader with experience in organizational transformation. The candidate must possess an earned doctorate or terminal degree and have passion for teaching, learning and innovation. Prior government...


Clinician Educator
Stanford University

Applications are invited from individuals who have completed clinical training in anesthesia, and who have additional experience appropriate for an academic career for positions as Clinical Instructor, Clinical Assistant Professor, Clinical Associate Professor, Clinical Professor ...


Accounting Manager
University of Baltimore

Reporting to the Associate Comptroller, the Accounting Manager is responsible for the accurate and timely management of the processing of payroll. Serves as the business owner and subject matter expert for the various PeopleSoft modules and other technologies utilized...


Faculty Development Specialist
The University of Scranton

Job Summary/Basic Function: Support innovative teaching informed by the scholarship of teaching and learning and best practices in curriculum design and delivery. Sustain a university-wide conversation on teaching and student learning outcomes.


Copyright 2012 © Diverse: Issues In Higher Education, a CMA publication.
Cox, Matthews, and Associates, Inc., 10520 Warwick Ave, Suite B-8, Fairfax, VA 22030