Investigator

Vanessa Lee

Principal · Black Lorikeet Consultant

VLVanessa Lee
Papers(1)
Health Literacy Envir…
Collaborators(5)
Hailay GesesewHyacinth UdahKiros HiruyLillian MwanriTinashe Dune
Institutions(5)
The University Of Syd…Flinders UniversityJames Cook UniversitySwinburne University …Charles Darwin Univer…

Papers

Health Literacy Environment of Breast and Cervical Cancer among Black African Women Globally: A Systematic Review Protocol of Mixed Methods

Adequate health literacy is a necessity to enable effective decision making to seek, access and utilise appropriate health care service. Evidence exists indicating a low level of general health literacy among Black African women, especially those with a refugee background. Breast and cervical are the most common cancers, with Black African women or women with African ethnicity being disproportionately overrepresented. The level of health literacy specific to breast and cervical cancer among Black African women, especially those with a refugee background, has not been reviewed systematically. The present study describes a protocol for a systematic review of the available evidence on the level of health literacy specific to breast and cervical cancer among Black African women globally. We will perform a systematic review of the available quantitative and qualitative studies. The search will include studies that describe the level of health literacy specific to breast and cervical cancer among Black African women. We will conduct a preliminary search on Google scholar to build the concepts for search terms, and a full search strategy using the identified concepts and keywords across four databases namely PubMed, SCOPUS, CINAHL and Web of Sciences. We will use Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) to schematically present the search strategy. We will use the standardized Joanna Briggs Institute quality appraisal and selection tool to recruit studies, and the data extraction tool to synthesise the information extracted from the recruited studies. We will be guided by socioecological theory and Indigenous epistemology to synthesise the non-quantifiable information thematically, and pool the quantitative information using meta-analysis, based on the availability of information.

1Papers
5Collaborators

Positions

2023–

Principal

Black Lorikeet Consultant

2011–

Associate Professor

The University of Sydney · Medicine and Health

2019–

Founding CEO

Black Lorikeet Cultural Broker · Research and cultural governance

2007–

Lecturer

Griffith University · Faculty of Medicine, School of Public Health

2005–

research assistant

University of Queensland · Medicine, Public Health

1994–

Senior Teacher

Queensland Department of Education