Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dzt6s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T23:19:17.816Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Jordanian primary healthcare practitioner in cancer control

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2017

Nour A. Obeidat*
Affiliation:
Cancer Control Office, King Hussein Cancer Center, Amman, Jordan
Feras I. Hawari
Affiliation:
Cancer Control Office, King Hussein Cancer Center, Amman, Jordan
Malek A. Habashneh
Affiliation:
Awareness and Communication Health Directorate, Ministry of Health, Amman, Jordan
Rawan A. Shihab
Affiliation:
Cancer Control Office, King Hussein Cancer Center, Amman, Jordan
*
Correspondence to: Nour A. Obeidat, Head of Applied Research Unit, Cancer Control Office, 202 Queen Rania Al-Abdullah Street, King Hussein Cancer Center, Amman 11941, Jordan. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Aim

To measure the knowledge, perceptions, and practices of Jordanian primary healthcare practitioners (PHCPs) (physicians, nurses, midwives, and nurse aids) employed in Jordanian Ministry of Health (MoH) primary health clinics with respect to counseling on cancer (cancer screening, the signs and symptoms of cancer, and referral for specialized care).

Background

Integration of oncology services within primary care is a means of enhancing cancer early detection, and requires involvement of skilled. In the Middle East, little is known about PHCPs’ potential to be providers of such services.

Methods

A questionnaire measuring PHCP perceptions and practices related to counseling on cancer screening and diagnosis was distributed to PHCPs across MoH clinics covering the main regions of Jordan.

Findings

A total of 322 practitioners responded (75.1% response). Across most activities involving cancer detection, no more than 30% reported performing activities. Roughly half of PHCPs expressed discomfort at providing cancer-related counseling and at least 43% of non-physicians expressed limited confidence in cancer-related counseling. Confidence was a consistent predictor of provision of counseling and confidence in turn was associated with having greater knowledge, having positive a valuation of counseling, and being a physician. Results reveal points where educational efforts can strengthen PHCPs’ provision of cancer control-related services.

Type
Research
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2017 

Introduction

Primary healthcare practitioners (PHCPs) offer a cost-effective means of managing the growing global burden of non-communicable disease (World Health Organization, 2008), and specifically in the context of cancer control, there is a heightened call to integrate various components of cancer prevention and care within primary healthcare systems (Sussman and Baldwin, 2010; Emery et al., 2014; Rubin et al., Reference Sewitch, Burtin, Dawes, Yaffe, Snell, Roper, Zanelli and Pavilanis2015). Oncology primary care can be a multi-professional effort distributed among physicians, nurses, midwives, and allied health professionals, and can encompass cancer prevention (promoting healthy lifestyles, availing the appropriate vaccinations, treating infections); ensuring screening of amenable cancers; inquiring about family history of cancer and managing patients accordingly; and knowing as well as handling the possible signs and symptoms of cancer in order to avoid diagnostic and referral delays (Rose et al., Reference Schichtel, Rose and Sellers2013; Rubin et al., Reference Sewitch, Burtin, Dawes, Yaffe, Snell, Roper, Zanelli and Pavilanis2015).

Jordan in the Middle East is an upper-middle income country facing tremendous challenges: a growing population of young residents (and an impending healthcare burden as they age), as well as a high influx of refugees, have led to a straining of the country’s healthcare resources (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Reference Abdel-Razeq, Attiga and Mansour2015). In addition, cancer control in Jordan has yet to be integrated within a cohesive healthcare system that can provide holistic cancer care, and PHCPs are neglected in their potential to contribute toward cancer control (Abdel-Razeq et al., 2015). However, before advocating for a more prominent role for PHCPs (both physicians and non-physicians) in cancer control, customized pathways and guidelines for integrating cancer care will need to be developed. These in turn require a preliminary understanding of the current status of primary healthcare in the country as it relates to cancer, and thus the potential of this sector to assume an effective role in cancer control.

Jordan’s national (public) primary healthcare system is a subsidized one offered through the Jordanian MoH (World Health Organization, 2006). The MoH’s primary healthcare system is the first point of access to the healthcare system for a substantial proportion of Jordanians [it is the largest insurer in the country (Jordanian Department of Statistics, Reference Ahmad, Dardas and Ahmad2015)] and is comprised of three types of clinics categorized by the specialty of physicians available to provide primary healthcare: those that provide preventive and curative services through both general practitioners and specialists (98 clinics in 2015, also known as ‘comprehensive’ clinics), those that provide preventive and curative services through largely general practitioners (377 clinics, also known as ‘primary’ clinics), and those that provide basic ancillary services (these are known as village health clinics or sub-centers, and are not equipped to provide comprehensive primary care, nor is a physician consistently available in them) (World Health Organization, 2006; Jordanian Ministry of Health, Reference Bandura2015a). Only in the event of a need for advanced diagnostic or treatment interventions are patients referred to tertiary care. The MoH is the largest source of healthcare insurance among insured Jordanians (42% report this as their source of insurance), and is particularly critical in economically disadvantaged areas on Jordan, where proportions of insured Jordanians can reach 90%, largely through public health insurance (Jordanian Department of Statistics, Reference Ahmad, Dardas and Ahmad2015). As of 2015, Jordan’s primary healthcare clinics operated through 147 specialist physicians, 1335 general practitioners, and 2929 nurses, midwives, and nurse assistants or aids (Jordanian Ministry of Health, 2015b).

Jordan’s primary healthcare clinics, through their general practitioners, nurses, and midwives, should be a viable means of providing cancer-related services, particularly services that promote early detection and thus markedly improve the prognosis of a cancer diagnosis. However, recent studies indicate that early detection of cancer remains an issue: for example, among Jordanian colorectal cancer patients, 33.9% suffered from a delay in presentation while 68.1% suffered a diagnosis delay (Abu-Helalah et al., 2016); furthermore, only 16.8% of women in Jordan reported being examined for breast cancer by a physician (Abu-Helalah et al., 2015); finally, only roughly a third of Jordanians have ever been informed (by persons, or through media or self-reading) that they needed to be screened for cancer, although the majority (75%) preferred to be informed about this through healthcare providers (Ahmad et al., Reference Levy, Joshi, Xu, Daly and James2015). There is thus a need to ensure that PHCPs are more engaged in raising the issue of early detection with the patients they serve.

In light of the above, we aimed to gain a better understanding of the knowledge, perceptions, and practices of Jordanian PHCPs (physicians, nurses, midwives, and nurse aids) employed in MoH clinics with respect to counseling on cancer (cancer screening, the signs and symptoms of cancer, and referral for specialized care). Our results can be used to directly inform the planning of cancer control interventions targeting practitioners at the primary care level, and can provide insight to others in the region seeking to do likewise. We specifically studied knowledge of the most common cancers in Jordan [breast, colorectal, and lung (Jordan Cancer Registry, 2013)]; practices as they pertain to inquiring about the signs and symptoms of these cancers and about family history of cancer; perceptions with respect to counseling on the signs and symptoms of cancer; and barriers to counseling patients on cancer early detection. We were particularly interested in including both physicians and non-physicians in our study, given the larger number of the latter in Jordan’s MoH clinics and their potential as healthcare providers and educators to share the distribution of efforts with physicians.

Methods

Ethical review

The study was reviewed and approved by the Institutional Review Board at King Hussein Cancer Center.

Setting and sample

A purposive sample representing primary healthcare clinics in Jordan and covering the three main regions of the country (North, Central, South) was selected by the Jordanian MoH. Data collection was conducted between February and March of 2014, with surveys being distributed to all practicing PHCPs.

Questionnaire

An Arabic questionnaire based on the social cognitive theory (Bandura, Reference Mansell, Shapley, Jordan and Jordan2004) and informed by other studies that evaluated professional practices in the area of cancer-related counseling (National Cancer Institute, 2006; Sewitch et al., Reference Simon, Forbes, Boniface, Warburton, Brain, Dessaix, Donnelly, Haynes, Hvidberg, Lagerlund, Petermann, Tishelman, Vedsted, Vigmostad, Wardle and Ramirez2006; Levy et al., Reference Rose, Devita, Lawrence and Rosenberg2008; Simon et al., 2012) was developed. The final questionnaire was customized to the local primary healthcare environment in Jordan and covered key practices and knowledge items that were both feasible and of relevance to Jordanian PHCPs, and referred to Jordan’s most commonly occurring cancers (breast and colorectal in women; and lung and colorectal in men).

Physicians and allied health staff working in the Jordanian MoH as well as King Hussein Cancer Center reviewed the final questionnaire to ensure its content validity, and the tool was piloted in one primary healthcare clinic. The final questionnaire consisted of two main components: provider-reported knowledge, attitudes, and practices pertaining to healthy lifestyle counseling (focusing on cancer prevention) and provider-reported knowledge, attitudes, and practices pertaining to counseling on the perceived burden and early signs and symptoms of the most prevalent cancers in Jordan. The current study focuses on the latter component, and descriptions of the sections covering this component are therefore included below.

  • Practices: practitioners were asked to estimate, among patients 18 years of age or older visiting the clinic in the past two months, the percentage for whom several actions were performed. Actions included: inquiring about the signs and symptoms of breast, lung, and colorectal cancer; inquiring about a patient’s family history of cancer, and providing recommendations with respect to cancer screening. In addition, responses were further categorized during analysis as binary outcomes: whether or not each activity was performed on the majority – 70% or more – of adult patients.

  • Perceptions: level of agreement (on a five-point scale) with statements on counseling on the signs and symptoms of cancer (perceived role, value, and outcome expectancies). Responses to these variables were dichotomized during analysis to reflect whether or not the respondent had perceptions that would be potentially detrimental to cancer control counseling (ie, proportions of PHCPs who agreed or were neutral to negative statements regarding counseling and proportions of PHCPs who disagreed or were neutral to positive statements on counseling).

  • Perceived confidence (on a five-point scale) to counsel on the signs and symptoms of cancer (breast, colorectal, and lung); to provide counseling on screening tests for breast and colorectal cancer; to provide counseling on the basic principles of cancer treatment; and to provide counseling with respect to how patients can further access the healthcare system for specialized screening or diagnostic tests. Responses to these variables were also dichotomized during analysis (confident or highly confident, versus all other responses).

  • A general section probing barriers to counseling patients on cancer prevention and early detection was included. Various factors (practitioner-related, patient-related, system-related) were listed and practitioners rated each (major barrier, moderate barrier,. not a barrier).

  • Knowledge of the most common cancers in Jordan, and knowledge with respect to the signs and symptoms of breast, colorectal, and lung cancer (by listing various signs and symptoms and instructing respondents to select those they knew to be signs and symptoms). Specifically, 11, 11, and 10 signs and symptoms were listed for breast, colorectal, and lung cancer, respectively.

  • A section measuring practitioners’ demographic and professional characteristics.

The reliability of the questionnaire was also confirmed (Cronbach’s α=0.80).

Statistical analysis

Descriptive statistics were generated to present the characteristics of the sample, and the knowledge levels, perceptions, and practices of PHCPs with respect to various elements of cancer detection.

We were interested in using our results to inform future efforts to promote among PHCPs the task of counseling – at the very least – on signs and symptoms of the main cancers in Jordan. We aimed to identify factors that were associated with being a PHCP that provided such counseling, and accordingly offer guidance with respect to how to enhance positive factors and minimize deterring factors. We therefore used multivariate regression analyses to further probe the factors that were associated with three main outcomes: the reported percentage of patients provided with counseling on the signs and symptoms of breast cancer, the reported percentage of patients provided with counseling on the signs and symptoms of colorectal cancer, and the reported percentage of patients provided with counseling on the signs and symptoms of lung cancer. Co-variates that were examined included demographic and professional characteristics such as sex, age, being a physician (versus non-physician PHCP), working within a primary clinic or a comprehensive one, geographic region of clinic; behavioral variables that are in theory associated with performing an action (reporting confidence to provide counseling, having a positive valuation of counseling, and expectancies that PHCPs associate with counseling); and knowledge of each cancer site’s signs and symptoms (operationalized as the number of signs and symptoms identified) (Bandura, Reference Mansell, Shapley, Jordan and Jordan2004). The results were adjusted for the clustering effects within clinics.

All analyses were carried out using STATA SE 12.1.

Results

Sample characteristics

A total of 322 PHCPs (218 non-physicians, mean age 35.4 years; 104 physicians, mean age 42.7 years) working in 20 clinics distributed across the country completed the survey (75.1% response rate). Non-physicians were largely (85.3%) women, while physicians were largely (72.3%) male.

Current practices

Reported frequencies of various activities related to counseling on the early detection of cancer are included in Figure 1. Approximately 50% of physicians reported inquiring about family history of cancer to the majority of their patients. Across all other listed activities, no more than roughly 30% reported providing the activity to the majority of their patients.

Figure 1 Provision of counseling on early detection of cancer with adult patients (older than 18 years of age) over the past two months within primary healthcare clinics in Jordan (proportions reporting providing counseling to 70% or more of patients presented)

Perceptions

Perceptions were analyzed and presented as those likely to be unconducive to counseling on cancer (Table 1). When asked about the value of counseling on the signs and symptoms of cancer, the majority (at least 80%) of practitioners perceived value in providing this. However, ~55% of practitioners believed that their counseling on cancer detection would scare patients, while roughly a quarter did not perceive their counseling would lead to detection of cancers at earlier stages. Almost half expressed discomfort at providing such counseling. With respect to perceived role, more respondents perceived counseling on cancer early detection to be the physician’s role. Particularly among nurses, substantial (at least 43%) proportions expressed limited confidence in providing counseling on signs and symptoms of the cancers listed, and counseling on maneuvering the healthcare system when dealing with a possible cancer diagnosis (approximately a third of physicians also expressed this limited confidence).

Table 1 Perceptions of provision of counseling on early detection of cancer among practitioners in primary healthcare clinics in Jordan (proportions presented)

a Significant χ 2 statistic (P<0.05) when comparing physicians with non-physicians.

Knowledge

The majority of PHCPs could correctly state the most common cancer in females in Jordan (breast). The most common cancers in males were identified as lung (by physicians) and prostate (by non-physicians). With respect to identification of signs and symptoms of each cancer site (11 breast cancer signs, 11 colorectal signs, and 10 lung cancer signs), the average numbers of correctly identified signs and symptoms were as follows for non-physicians and physicians: 7.4 and 7.5 for breast cancer, 6.4 and 7.5 for colorectal cancer (P<0.05), and 6.2 and 6.9 for lung cancer (P<0.05).

When asked to identify the screening tests that PHCPs would recommend to average-risk patients older than 50 years of age, variation in practitioners’ knowledge with respect to what tests were relevant was observed. For example, the majority (at least 70%) of practitioners recommended self and clinical breast exams, ~71% recommended colonoscopies, and ~64% recommended fecal occult blood test. Chest X-rays and Digital Rectal Exams were also recommended (roughly 69 and 55%) by a notable proportion of practitioners.

Barriers

The most frequently reported barriers pertinent to counseling on cancer early detection included environmental or system barriers (‘insufficient staff support,’ ‘work environment is taxing and deters counseling,’ ‘not enough resources like leaflets,’ and ‘not having enough information’). To a somewhat lesser extent, competing patient needs, patients not perceiving themselves susceptible to cancer, and patients being fatalistic about developing cancer were also reported as major barriers (by approximately a third of practitioners).

Multivariate analyses of current practices

Factors associated with the provision of counseling varied with the site of cancer (Table 2). However, reporting high confidence in counseling was a consistently significant predictor of provision of counseling (on signs and symptoms of cancer) to a greater percentage of patients. Furthermore, being a male PHCP was associated with a lower reported frequency of counseling on breast cancer, while being a physician was associated with a higher reported frequency of counseling on lung cancer.

Table 2 Multivariate regressions to assess factors associated with providing counseling on signs and symptoms of three cancers (breast, colorectal, lung) and factors associated with reported confidence to counsel among practitioners in primary healthcare clinics in Jordan

* Significant values are asterisked.

Due to the consistent effect of reported confidence, we also probed factors that were associated with high perceived confidence among PHCPs (Table 2). Although these varied by site, notable factors that were associated with a greater likelihood of being confident in the provision of counseling on signs and symptoms of cancer included being a physician, having greater knowledge of the signs and symptoms of cancer, male sex, associating counseling with a feeling of professional self-respect, and perceiving such counseling to be a highly valuable intervention.

Discussion

We explored the potential of PHCPs as viable resources for counseling patients on cancer. Our study shows low cancer control-related counseling rates, and highlights various perceptions as well as knowledge deficits that should be improved if cancer control integration within the primary healthcare system in Jordan is to be discussed.

Practitioners in our sample reported some discomfort (and notable proportions also reported limited confidence) in discussing cancer-related topics with patients. Furthermore, knowledge gaps and limited confidence (relating to being able to identify the signs and symptoms of cancer, being able to distinguish and recommend effective screening tests, and being able to counsel patients on further cancer care) were deciphered. Given that counseling on cancer prevention and early detection should entail extensive knowledge of such topics (Rubin et al., Reference Sewitch, Burtin, Dawes, Yaffe, Snell, Roper, Zanelli and Pavilanis2015), the knowledge gaps detected at the level of the survey – which probed knowledge at a very basic level – reflect a great need for practitioner education. Furthermore, barriers that were noted by practitioners reiterate the need to approach the integration of cancer-related initiatives in primary care with a broader perspective of the primary healthcare system and system-level changes that need to be addressed in order to facilitate such integration.

Our multivariate analyses show perceived confidence to be a consistent predictor of provision of counseling. In turn, being a confident PHCP was associated with having greater knowledge, being a physician, and being a PHCP who valued counseling. These results further support the need for educational activities that can target PHCPs and increase knowledge as well as change perceptions with respect to the value of counseling, with the hopes of also equalizing level of confidence across physician and non-physician PHCPs. Our recommendations are in line with what others have called for in the Middle East (Silbermann et al., Reference Sussman and Baldwin2013), and educational initiatives should be interactive and preferably coupled with additional measures such as audits and feedback in order to achieve a greater effect (Mansell et al., Reference Rubin, Berendsen, Crawford, Dommett, Earle, Emery, Fahey, Grassi, Grunfeld, Gupta, Hamilton, Hiom, Hunter, Lyratzopoulos, Macleod, Mason, Mitchell, Neal, Peake, Roland, Seifert, Sisler, Sussman, Taplin, Vedsted, Voruganti, Walter, Wardle, Watson, Weller, Wender, Whelan, Whitlock, Wilkinson, De Wit and Zimmermann2011; Schichtel et al., Reference Silbermann, Epner, Charalambous, Baider, Puchalski, Balducci, Gultekin, Abdalla, Daher, Al-Tarawneh and Smith2013).

On a policy-related level, the results of the study indicate incongruous cancer control efforts in the country. While in select elements of cancer control, Jordan has managed to make progress [eg, having a breast cancer screening program that includes mammography and having a specialized cancer center serving the country (Abdel-Razeq et al., 2015)], cancer screening and early diagnosis efforts at the primary healthcare level are lagging.

The finding that Jordanian PHCPs have yet to fulfill their role as knowledgeable and confident healthcare gatekeepers that can decipher and communicate the early signs and symptoms of major cancers, and provide basic information to patients with respect to navigating the healthcare system for further care, is critical. While several advances across the cancer control continuum have been made, improved cancer prevention and early diagnosis are fundamental to these advances and need to be addressed at the primary care level. The appeal of preparing PHCPs to be more involved in cancer control stems from the fact that, as the first (and often continued) point of contact for substantial proportions of the global population, they are at a focal point to enhance prevention and early diagnosis efforts (Rubin et al., Reference Sewitch, Burtin, Dawes, Yaffe, Snell, Roper, Zanelli and Pavilanis2015). While some challenges present with respect to involving PHCPs in cancer control [eg, lack of clear delineation of responsibilities in the context of cancer control, credibility and reliability of PHCPs – as perceived by patients – to engage in cancer-related services, lack of systems support to facilitate cancer screening and early diagnosis efforts by PHCPs, lack of timely provision of up-to-date and evidence-based information for PHCPs, shortage of PHCPs skilled in cancer control, and the need for much better coordination between PHCPs and cancer specialists (Rose et al., Reference Schichtel, Rose and Sellers2013)], engagement of PHCPs cannot be overlooked as a viable and key point of entry to cancer control (Rubin et al., Reference Sewitch, Burtin, Dawes, Yaffe, Snell, Roper, Zanelli and Pavilanis2015). The results of our study directly address the potential for PHCPs and are one way of beginning the dialogue about PHCPs and their role in cancer control.

Our study has some limitations. We did not probe the full scope of possible cancer prevention and early detection services, since, realistically, these could not all be covered in a single survey. Rather, our approach was simple and sought at a basic level to demonstrate the general level of preparedness of practitioners in a high-middle-income Middle Eastern country. Nevertheless, even at this level, our results suggest deficits in provision of appropriate patient counseling and indicate knowledge-related and attitudinal barriers that can hinder Jordanian PHCPs’ provision of cancer control-related services. Our results are valuable in that they provide insight with respect to specific areas to focus on in order to guide professional educational efforts. Such efforts will lead to better educated and more empowered PHCPs, in turn translating into improved patient care.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to acknowledge the data management efforts of Ms. Asiha Shtaiwi and Ms. Asma Hatoqai from the Cancer Control Office at King Hussein Cancer Center.

Conflicts of Interest

None.

Ethical Standards

All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.

References

Abdel-Razeq, H., Attiga, F. and Mansour, A. 2015: Cancer care in Jordan. Hematology/Oncology and Stem Cell Therapy 8, 6470.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Abu-Helalah, M.A., Alshraideh, H.A., Al-Serhan, A.A., Kawaleet, M. and Nesheiwat, A.I. 2015: Knowledge, barriers and attitudes towards breast cancer mammography screening in jordan. Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention 16, 39813990.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Abu-Helalah, M.A., Alshraideh, H.A., Da’na, M., Al-Hanaqtah, M., Abuseif, A., Arqoob, K. and Ajaj, A. 2016: Delay in presentation, diagnosis and treatment for colorectal cancer patients in Jordan. Journal of Gastrointestinal Cancer 47, 3646.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ahmad, M.M., Dardas, L.A. and Ahmad, H. 2015: Cancer prevention and care: a national sample from Jordan. Journal of Cancer Education 30, 301311.Google Scholar
Bandura, A. 2004: Health promotion by social cognitive means. Health Education & Behavior 31, 143164.Google Scholar
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace 2015: Jordan’s refugee crisis. September 2015. Retrieved 2 April 2016 from http://carnegieendowment.org/files/CP_247_Francis_Jordan_final.pdf.Google Scholar
Emery, J.D., Shaw, K., Williams, B., Mazza, D., Fallon-Ferguson, J., Varlow, M. and Trevena, L.J. 2014: The role of primary care in early detection and follow-up of cancer. Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology 11, 3848.Google Scholar
Jordan Cancer Registry 2013: Cancer incidence in Jordan. Retrieved 5 November 2016 from http://www.moh.gov.jo/EN/Pages/Periodic-Newsletters.aspx.Google Scholar
Jordanian Department of Statistics 2015: National Census. Retrieved 2 November 2016 from http://census.dos.gov.jo/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2016/02/Census_results_2016.pdf.Google Scholar
Jordanian Ministry of Health 2015a: Annual report. Retrieved 3 November 2016 from http://www.moh.gov.jo/EN/Pages/Periodic-Newsletters.aspx.Google Scholar
Jordanian Ministry of Health 2015b: Health indicators (human resources). Retrieved 3 November 2016 from http://www.moh.gov.jo/EN/Pages/mainind.aspx?ind=http%3a//apps.moh.gov.jo/reports/headermain.jsp?firstjsp=manpowermain&lang_parameter=english.Google Scholar
Levy, B.T., Joshi, M., Xu, Y., Daly, J. and James, P.A. 2008: Perceptions of Iowa family physicians regarding colorectal cancer screening. Medical Care 46, S103S108.Google Scholar
Mansell, G., Shapley, M., Jordan, J.L. and Jordan, K. 2011: Interventions to reduce primary care delay in cancer referral: a systematic review. British Journal of General Practice 61, e821e835.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
National Cancer Institute 2006: National survey of primary care physicians’ cancer screening recommendations and practices – colorectal and lung cancer screening questionnaire. Retrieved 14 June 2011 from http://healthservices.cancer.gov/surveys/screening_rp/screening_rp_colo_lung_inst.pdf.Google Scholar
Rose, M.G., Devita, V.T., Lawrence, T.S. and Rosenberg, S.A. 2013: Oncology in primary care. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.Google Scholar
Rubin, G., Berendsen, A., Crawford, S.M., Dommett, R., Earle, C., Emery, J., Fahey, T., Grassi, L., Grunfeld, E., Gupta, S., Hamilton, W., Hiom, S., Hunter, D., Lyratzopoulos, G., Macleod, U., Mason, R., Mitchell, G., Neal, R.D., Peake, M., Roland, M., Seifert, B., Sisler, J., Sussman, J., Taplin, S., Vedsted, P., Voruganti, T., Walter, F., Wardle, J., Watson, E., Weller, D., Wender, R., Whelan, J., Whitlock, J., Wilkinson, C., De Wit, N. and Zimmermann, C. 2015: The expanding role of primary care in cancer control. Lancet Oncology 16, 12311272.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schichtel, M., Rose, P.W. and Sellers, C. 2013: Educational interventions for primary healthcare professionals to promote the early diagnosis of cancer: a systematic review. Education for Primary Care 24, 274290.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sewitch, M.J., Burtin, P., Dawes, M., Yaffe, M., Snell, L., Roper, M., Zanelli, P. and Pavilanis, A. 2006: Colorectal cancer screening: physicians’ knowledge of risk assessment and guidelines, practice, and description of barriers and facilitators. Canadian Journal of Gastroenterology 20, 713718.Google Scholar
Silbermann, M., Epner, D.E., Charalambous, H., Baider, L., Puchalski, C.M., Balducci, L., Gultekin, M., Abdalla, R.F., Daher, M., Al-Tarawneh, M.R. and Smith, T.J. 2013: Promoting new approaches for cancer care in the Middle East. Annals of Oncology 24 (Suppl 7), vii5vii10.Google Scholar
Simon, A.E., Forbes, L.J., Boniface, D., Warburton, F., Brain, K.E., Dessaix, A., Donnelly, M., Haynes, K., Hvidberg, L., Lagerlund, M., Petermann, L., Tishelman, C., Vedsted, P., Vigmostad, M.N., Wardle, J. and Ramirez, A.J. 2012: An international measure of awareness and beliefs about cancer: development and testing of the ABC. BMJ Open 2, 1–8.Google Scholar
Sussman, J. and Baldwin, L.M. 2010: The interface of primary and oncology specialty care: from diagnosis through primary treatment. Journal National Cancer Institute. Monographs 2010, 1824.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
World Health Organization 2006: Health systems profile – Jordan. Retrieved 2 November 2016 http://apps.who.int/medicinedocs/documents/s17296e/s17296e.pdf.Google Scholar
World Health Organization 2008: The world health report 2008: primary health care now more than ever. Retrieved 15 May 2011 from http://www.who.int/whr/2008/en/index.html.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1 Provision of counseling on early detection of cancer with adult patients (older than 18 years of age) over the past two months within primary healthcare clinics in Jordan (proportions reporting providing counseling to 70% or more of patients presented)

Figure 1

Table 1 Perceptions of provision of counseling on early detection of cancer among practitioners in primary healthcare clinics in Jordan (proportions presented)

Figure 2

Table 2 Multivariate regressions to assess factors associated with providing counseling on signs and symptoms of three cancers (breast, colorectal, lung) and factors associated with reported confidence to counsel among practitioners in primary healthcare clinics in Jordan