Investigator

Syed Abdul Hamid

Professor · University of Dhaka , Institute of Health Economics

Research Interests

SAHSyed Abdul Hamid
Papers(2)
Knowledge, Attitudes,…Economic burden of br…
Collaborators(8)
Taufique JoarderBrian Shao Tian WoonEvelyn Yi Ting WongMd. Mahfujur RahmanMd. Ragaul AzimMd. Sirajul IslamQuazi Nazmus SakibRavindran Kanesvaran
Institutions(4)
University Of DhakaSingHealth Duke-NUS A…National Cancer Centr…NORDIK Institute

Papers

Knowledge, Attitudes, and Health-Seeking Behavior for Cervical, Breast, and Oral Cancers Among Women in Jashore, Bangladesh: A Cross-Sectional Study

PURPOSE This study aimed to assess cancer-related knowledge, attitudes, screening behaviors, and willingness to engage in community-based screening for cervical, breast, and oral cancers among women in rural Bangladesh, with the goal of informing the design of a scalable, national cancer screening strategy. METHODS A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 1,046 eligible women (age ≥ 30 years or married ≥ 10 years) in Nawly village, Jashore, Bangladesh. Trained interviewers administered a structured questionnaire assessing sociodemographics, cancer knowledge, attitudes, screening behaviors, and willingness to participate in organized screening. Descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic regression models identified predictors of knowledge, participation, and willingness. RESULTS Although 75.4% of women were aware of cervical cancer, only 28.3% correctly identified screening intervals. Awareness of breast and oral cancer screening was lower (11.5% and 6.2%, respectively). Participation in cervical cancer screening was 18.2%, and <1% for breast or oral cancer. However, willingness to participate in future community-based screening was high (>89% across all cancer types). Higher education and income were significantly associated with better knowledge and increased screening participation. Fear and misconceptions were the most common barriers among those unwilling to participate. CONCLUSION Despite limited screening uptake, there is strong community readiness for organized cancer screening. These findings underscore the need for tailored education campaigns and scalable, community-based programs to enhance early cancer detection in low-resource settings such as Bangladesh.

Economic burden of breast, cervical, and oral cancer in Bangladesh: a cost-of-illness study

Breast, cervical, and oral cancers are leading causes of morbidity and mortality in Bangladesh, placing a heavy economic burden on households and the health system. Yet, this burden remains poorly understood, as no prior study has comprehensively examined their economic impact. Moreover, the profound psychological suffering experienced by patients are often overlooked in existing global evidence. Therefore, this study aims to estimate the comprehensive economic burden of breast, cervical, and oral cancers in Bangladesh from the household perspective. Using a cross-sectional design, primary data were collected through structured interviews with 346 cancer patients. A cost-of-illness approach was employed. Direct medical and direct non-medical costs were estimated based on respondent-reported expenditures. Indirect costs, i.e.income loss, were calculated using the human capital approach. Intangible costs, reflecting pain and discomfort, were quantified using the willingness-to-pay method. The average total cost per patient was US$12,117, with breast cancer accounting for the highest burden. Intangible costs comprised 47.7 % of the total, underscoring the substantial psychological impact of cancer on patients. The combined national economic burden exceeded US$1.17 billion. Catastrophic health expenditure was nearly universal (99.1 %), with average treatment costs exceeding the catastrophic threshold by 44-fold. Expenditures were significantly higher among wealthier households, patients with longer disease duration, and those seeking care from multiple facilities. Breast, cervical, and oral cancers impose a major financial and psychological burden on households in Bangladesh. The near-universal catastrophic health expenditure and high intangible costs highlight the urgent need for accessible and affordable cancer care. Policies should strengthen financial protection, decentralize diagnosis and treatment, introduce insurance with cancer-specific benefits, establish an effective referral system, integrate psychosocial support and strengthen early detection programs.

11Works
2Papers
8Collaborators
Uterine Cervical NeoplasmsBreast NeoplasmsEarly Detection of CancerMouth Neoplasms

Positions

1999–

Professor

University of Dhaka · Institute of Health Economics

Education

2009

PhD in Economics

The University of Sheffield · Economics

2001

M.Sc. in Health Economics

University of York · Economics and Related Studies