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Original Articles

Can Women Facilitate Men’s Prostate Cancer Screening Informed Decision-Making? The M-PACT Trial

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Pages 964-973 | Published online: 27 Nov 2017
 

Abstract

The M-PACT study compared an all-male with a mixed-sex intervention to increase informed decision-making for prostate cancer screening among African-American men in church settings. We recruited 262 men in 18 churches randomized to the two intervention approaches. Trained and certified lay peer community health advisors in each church led a series of four men’s health workshops on informed decision-making for prostate cancer screening. African-American male workshop participants completed baseline, post-workshop, and 12-month follow-up surveys. Contrary to our expectations, including women in the workshops did not result in increased intervention efficacy for the informed decision-making outcomes as both groups showed significant improvement over time in several study outcomes including stage of decision-making for prostate cancer screening, preference for role in decision-making, prostate cancer knowledge, and self-reports of prostate specific antigen testing. Finally, men who attended multiple workshops had better informed decision-making outcomes on several indicators. The current findings suggest mixed results from including women in this men’s health educational intervention. Future work should consider optimal ways of providing family support for African-American men’s health promotion.

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge Dr. Tony Whitehead, who contributed to the intervention development and formative phases of the project, and Rev. Alma Savoy and Ms. Koko Barnes, who assisted with community engagement and intervention implementation activities. We would also like to thank all the churches, Pastors, community health advisors, and volunteers who supported this project.

Funding

This work was supported by a grant from the American Cancer Society (RGST-10-113-01-CPPB) and was approved by the University of Maryland Institutional Review Board (12-0095). The clinical trials.gov registration number for this study is NCT02131779.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by a grant from the American Cancer Society (RGST-10-113-01-CPPB) and was approved by the University of Maryland Institutional Review Board (12-0095). The clinical trials.gov registration number for this study is NCT02131779.

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