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Research ArticleOriginal Article

Women’s Responses To The Mammography Experience

Manette K. Fine, Barbara K. Rimer and Perry Watts
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice November 1993, 6 (6) 546-555; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3122/jabfm.6.6.546
Manette K. Fine
From the Division of Population Science, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA (MKF,PW), and the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center, Durham, NC (BKR). Address reprint requests to Manette K. Fine, DO, Fox Chase Cancer Center, 510 Township Line Road, Cheltenham, PA 19012.
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Barbara K. Rimer
From the Division of Population Science, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA (MKF,PW), and the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center, Durham, NC (BKR). Address reprint requests to Manette K. Fine, DO, Fox Chase Cancer Center, 510 Township Line Road, Cheltenham, PA 19012.
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Perry Watts
From the Division of Population Science, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA (MKF,PW), and the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center, Durham, NC (BKR). Address reprint requests to Manette K. Fine, DO, Fox Chase Cancer Center, 510 Township Line Road, Cheltenham, PA 19012.
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Abstract

Background: Accounts of mammography-related anxiety, embarrassment, and pain have been barriers to women contemplating a mammogram. Because it is not known how many women have had bad mammography experiences, we designed a study to learn what women actually experience when they have a mammogram.

Methods: Two hundred fifty-five women were interviewed immediately after having a mammogram at three different breast-imaging centers in the Philadelphia area.

Results: Significant racial differences were noted in this study with reports of mammography-related anxiety and pain. Nonwhite women and women who had less than a high-school education reported significantly more anxiety about having a mammogram. Sixty percent of all women interviewed were anxious about having a mammogram; 20 percent of them reported being extremely anxious. White women reported pain more often than African-American women.

Only 12 percent of the women reported that their physicians had explained the mammography procedure, but 61 percent of those women reported no anxiety versus 37 percent of women whose physicians did not explain the procedure.

More than one-third (34 percent) of women having a first mammogram stated that their mammogram experience affected their future plans for having another.

Conclusion: Extra physician or nurse time spent in explaining mammography to women could result in lower anxiety, higher levels of future intentions to get mammograms, and better experiences for the women themselves.

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The Journal of the American Board of Family     Practice: 6 (6)
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice
Vol. 6, Issue 6
1 Nov 1993
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Women’s Responses To The Mammography Experience
Manette K. Fine, Barbara K. Rimer, Perry Watts
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice Nov 1993, 6 (6) 546-555; DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.6.6.546

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Women’s Responses To The Mammography Experience
Manette K. Fine, Barbara K. Rimer, Perry Watts
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice Nov 1993, 6 (6) 546-555; DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.6.6.546
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