TY - JOUR
T1 - Health responsibility and workplace health promotion among women
T2 - Early detection of cancer
AU - Kushnir, Talma
AU - Rabinowitz, Stanley
AU - Melamed, Samuel
AU - Weisberg, Esther
AU - Ribak, Joseph
N1 - Funding Information:
Received 14July 1994; accepted 15 February 1995. This research was supported by the Committee for Preventive Action and Research in Occupational Health, Ministry of Labor, Jerusalem. Address correspondence to Dr. T. Kushnir, Occupational Health and Rehabilitation Institute, Loewenstein Hospital, POBox3,Raanana 43100, Israel.
PY - 1995
Y1 - 1995
N2 - The importance of health responsibility as one aspect of a health-promoting lifestyle has been emphasized repeatedly. Yet there are only a few empirical studies of its role in preventive behavior. We examined the relationship between health responsibility and early-detection practices for breast and cervical cancer. A group of 253 women employees of a large industrial company participated in a cancer screening program subsidized by the employer. They completed questionnaires assessing health responsibility and reported early-detection practices: frequency of breast self-examination and physician breast examinations, frequency of Pap tests, and time lapsed since last Pap test and breast examinations. Health responsibility was a significant independent predictor of breast examination indicators but not of Pap tests. Education level was an important predictor for Pap tests, and age predicted most early-detection practices. The findings lend some support to the role of health responsibility in initiating breast examinations. Better prediction of early-detection practices could be achieved by adding cognitive and emotional components to the existing responsibility scale and by distinguishing between retrospective and prospective responsibility.
AB - The importance of health responsibility as one aspect of a health-promoting lifestyle has been emphasized repeatedly. Yet there are only a few empirical studies of its role in preventive behavior. We examined the relationship between health responsibility and early-detection practices for breast and cervical cancer. A group of 253 women employees of a large industrial company participated in a cancer screening program subsidized by the employer. They completed questionnaires assessing health responsibility and reported early-detection practices: frequency of breast self-examination and physician breast examinations, frequency of Pap tests, and time lapsed since last Pap test and breast examinations. Health responsibility was a significant independent predictor of breast examination indicators but not of Pap tests. Education level was an important predictor for Pap tests, and age predicted most early-detection practices. The findings lend some support to the role of health responsibility in initiating breast examinations. Better prediction of early-detection practices could be achieved by adding cognitive and emotional components to the existing responsibility scale and by distinguishing between retrospective and prospective responsibility.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0029334688&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/07399339509516186
DO - 10.1080/07399339509516186
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C2 - 7649890
AN - SCOPUS:0029334688
SN - 0739-9332
VL - 16
SP - 329
EP - 340
JO - Health Care for Women International
JF - Health Care for Women International
IS - 4
ER -