Investigator

Taufique Joarder

Associate Professor of Global Health Evaluation · SingHealth Duke-NUS Academic Medical Centre, Global Health Project Evaluation Unit

Research Interests

TJTaufique Joarder
Papers(1)
Knowledge, Attitudes,…
Collaborators(7)
Brian Shao Tian WoonEvelyn Yi Ting WongMd. Mahfujur RahmanMd. Ragaul AzimMd. Sirajul IslamRavindran KanesvaranSyed Abdul Hamid
Institutions(3)
Duke Nus Medical Scho…National Cancer Centr…Institute of Health E…

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.

111Works
1Papers
7Collaborators
Uterine Cervical NeoplasmsBreast NeoplasmsEarly Detection of CancerMouth NeoplasmsCommunicable Disease ControlBacterial Infections

Positions

2022–

Associate Professor of Global Health Evaluation

SingHealth Duke-NUS Academic Medical Centre · Global Health Project Evaluation Unit

2021–

Vice-Chairperson

Public Health Foundation, Bangladesh

2019–

Associate Professor (Part Time)

North South University · Department of Public Health

2018–

Adjunct Faculty

BRAC University · BRAC James P Grant School of Public Health

2018–

Research Director

FHI 360 · USAID's Multisectoral Nutrition Project

Education

2015

DrPH

Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health · International Health

2008

MPH

BRAC University · James P Grant School of Public Health

2006

MBBS

University of Rajshahi · Dinajpur Medical College

Country

BD

Keywords
Health SystemsHealth PolicyNutrition PolicyHuman Resources for HealthPsychometricsImplementation ResearchElderly HealthMixed-Methods Research