Investigator

Bernard Yeboah-Asiamah Asare

Alfred Deakin Postdoctoral Research Fellow · Deakin University, Deakin Health Economics

About

Research Interests

BYABernard Yeboah-As…
Papers(1)
Towards a cervical ca…
Collaborators(5)
Bright Opoku AhinkorahBupe MwambaJoshua OkyereRichard Gyan AboagyeAbdul-Aziz Seidu
Institutions(5)
University Of AberdeenUniversity Of Technol…University of Hudders…University Of Health …James Cook University

Papers

Towards a cervical cancer-free future: women’s healthcare decision making and cervical cancer screening uptake in sub-Saharan Africa

Objective We investigated the association between women’s healthcare decision making and cervical cancer screening uptake in sub-Saharan Africa. Design Secondary data from the Demographic and Health Surveys of six countries in sub-Saharan Africa were used. We employed multilevel binary logistic regression modelling. Setting Sub-Saharan Africa. Participants Women aged 15–49 years in Benin (n=5282), Côte d’Ivoire (n=1925), Cameroon (n=7558), Kenya (n=6696), Namibia (n=1990) and Zimbabwe (n=5006). Primary outcome measures Cervical cancer screening uptake. Results The overall prevalence of cervical cancer screening across the six sub-Saharan African countries was 13.4%. Compared with women whose healthcare decisions were made solely by husbands/partners/someone else, the likelihood of cervical cancer screening uptake was significantly higher among women who took healthcare decisions in consultation with their husbands/partners (aOR=1.38; 95% CI 1.19 to 1.59), but highest among those who made healthcare decisions alone (aOR=1.66; 95% CI 1.44 to 1.91). Women aged between 40 and 45 years (aOR=5.18; 95% CI 3.15 to 8.52), those with higher education (aOR=2.13; 95% CI 1.57 to 2.88), those who had ever heard of cervical cancer (aOR=32.74; 95% CI 20.02 to 53.55), read newspaper or magazine at least once a week (aOR=2.11; 95% CI 1.83 to 2.44), listened to the radio at least once a week (aOR=1.35; 95% CI1.18 to 1.52) and those in households with richest wealth index (aOR=1.55; 95% CI 1.20 to 2.00) had significantly higher odds of screening for cervical cancer compared to their counterparts. Conclusion Women who are able to make autonomous healthcare decisions and those who practice shared decision making are more likely to uptake cervical cancer screening. Therefore, policy interventions should focus on empowering women to be able to take autonomous healthcare decisions or shared decision making while targeting subpopulations (ie, multiparous and rural-dwelling women, as well as those in other religious affiliations aside from Christianity) that are less likely to uptake cervical cancer screening. Also, the radio and print media could be leveraged in raising awareness about cervical cancer screening to accelerate cervical cancer screening uptake in sub-Saharan Africa.

66Works
1Papers
5Collaborators
Sexually Transmitted DiseasesEarly Detection of CancerUterine Cervical Neoplasms

Positions

2024–

Alfred Deakin Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Deakin University · Deakin Health Economics

2023–

Research Associate

Curtin University · School of Population Health

2023–

Research Fellow (Part-time)

Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute · Non-Communicable Diseases and Implementation Science

2023–

Research Fellow (Casual)

Deakin University · Institute for Health Transformation

2022–

Research Assistant (Casual)

Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute · Non-Communicable Diseases and Implementation Science

2018–

Assistant Lecturer

University of Education, Winneba · Department of Environmental Health Education, College of Science and Agriculture Education

2017–

Research Assistant

Korle Bu Teaching Hospital · National Cardiothoracic Centre

Education

2023

PhD Applied Health Sciences

University of Aberdeen · Institute of Applied Health Sciences

2023

PhD Public Health

Curtin University · Curtin School of Population Health

2015

MPH

University of Ghana · Public Health

2008

BSc

Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology · Herbal Medicine

Country

GH

Keywords
Maternal and child healthAdolescent HealthProstate cancerPublic HealthBehavioural ScienceOccupational Health Psychology