Randomised controlled community trial assessing efficacy of the AWACAN-ED public toolkit to improve cancer symptom awareness and intention to seek help in South Africa and Zimbabwe: study protocol
Suzanne Scott, Jone G Lurgain, Sarah Day, Bothwell T Guzha, Ekaterina Pazukhina, Kirsten Deanne Arendse, Sudarshan Govender, Mike Chirenje, Valerie Anne Sills, Jane Harries, Rosemary Jacobs, Jennifer Moodley, Fiona M Walter

TL;DR
This study tests a health communication toolkit in South Africa and Zimbabwe to improve cancer symptom awareness and encourage early help-seeking.
Contribution
The study introduces a culturally tailored cancer awareness toolkit evaluated in sub-Saharan Africa for the first time.
Findings
The AWACAN-ED toolkit will be tested for its ability to improve symptom recall.
The study will assess participants' intention to seek help after using the toolkit.
Emotional impact and toolkit acceptability will be measured as secondary outcomes.
Abstract
Despite the benefits of early diagnosis, most cancers in sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries are diagnosed at an advanced stage due to late presentation of symptoms, inadequate referral systems and poor diagnostic capacity. Health communication interventions have been used extensively in high-income countries to increase people’s awareness of cancer symptoms and encourage timely help-seeking. However, in SSA, there is still limited evidence on the effectiveness of these interventions and existing evaluations are mainly focused on communicable diseases rather than cancer. A randomised, multisite, controlled community trial will evaluate a culturally tailored health infographic toolkit delivered in rural and urban settings in the Western Cape Province in South Africa and Harare and surrounding provinces in Zimbabwe. Participants will be randomised to receive one of three African…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening · Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility
