Investigator

Danielle Mazza

Professor and Head · Monash University, General Practice

About

Research Interests

DMDanielle Mazza
Papers(1)
Motivators of Inappro…
Collaborators(6)
Jon EmeryKelly-Anne PhillipsMartha HickeyMorgan HunterRoger L. MilneCourtney Macdonald
Institutions(4)
Monash UniversityNanyang Technological…Peter MacCallum Cance…University of Melbour…

Papers

Motivators of Inappropriate Ovarian Cancer Screening: A Survey of Women and Their Clinicians

Abstract Background This study examined why women and doctors screen for ovarian cancer (OC) contrary to guidelines. Methods Surveys, based on the Theoretical Domains Framework, were sent to women in the Kathleen Cuningham Foundation Consortium for Research into Familial Breast Cancer and family physicians and gynecologists who organized their screening. Results Of 1264 Kathleen Cuningham Foundation Consortium for Research into Familial Breast Cancer women, 832 (65.8%) responded. In the past 2 years, 126 (15.1%) had screened. Most of these (n = 101, 80.2%) would continue even if their doctor told them it is ineffective. For women, key OC screening motivators operated in the domains of social role and goals (staying healthy for family, 93.9%), emotion and reinforcement (peace of mind, 93.1%), and beliefs about capabilities (tests are easy to have, 91.9%). Of 531 clinicians 252 (47.5%) responded; a minority (family physicians 45.8%, gynecologists 16.7%) thought OC screening was useful. For gynecologists, the main motivators of OC screening operated in the domains of environmental context (lack of other screening options, 27.6%), and emotion (patient peace of mind, 17.2%; difficulty discontinuing screening, 13.8%). For family physicians,, the strongest motivators were in the domains of social influence (women ask for these tests, 20.7%), goals (a chance these tests will detect cancer early, 16.4%), emotion (patient peace of mind, 13.8%), and environmental context (no other OC screening options, 11.2%). Conclusion Reasons for OC screening are mostly patient driven. Clinician knowledge and practice are discordant. Motivators of OC screening encompass several domains, which could be targeted in interventions to reduce inappropriate OC screening.

245Works
1Papers
6Collaborators
Musculoskeletal DiseasesBreast NeoplasmsEndometriosisMental DisordersLung NeoplasmsOvarian Neoplasms

Positions

2011–

Professor and Head

Monash University · General Practice

2010–

Acting Head

Monash University · General Practice

2005–

Associate Professor

Monash University · General Practice

2004–

Senior Medical Officer

Royal Women's Hospital · Choices Clinic

2001–

Senior Medical Educator

Royal Australian College of General Practitioners · GP Learning

2004–

General Practice Liaison Officer

Southern Health · Health for Kids in the South East

2002–

Associate Professor

International Medical University · Family Medicine

1996–

Medical Director

Family Planning Victoria

Education

2001

National Director of Quality Assurance & Continuing Education Standards Directorate

Royal Australian College of General Practitioners

1996

MD

University of Melbourne

1994

FRACGP

Royal Australian College of General Practitioners

1992

Diploma

Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists

1992

Graduate Diploma in Women's Health

University of Melbourne · Public Health and Community Medicine

1988

MBBS

Monash University