Barriers to management among the regular health screening population at a tertiary hospital healthcare centre in China: results from a qualitative analysis.
[OBJECTIVES] We aimed to better understand patients' perspectives on () treatment to develop tailored interventions for improving adherence.
APA
Wang Z, Zhang C, Jiang J (2026). Barriers to management among the regular health screening population at a tertiary hospital healthcare centre in China: results from a qualitative analysis.. BMJ open, 16(3), e106982. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2025-106982
MLA
Wang Z, et al.. "Barriers to management among the regular health screening population at a tertiary hospital healthcare centre in China: results from a qualitative analysis.." BMJ open, vol. 16, no. 3, 2026, pp. e106982.
PMID
41781046
Abstract
[OBJECTIVES] We aimed to better understand patients' perspectives on () treatment to develop tailored interventions for improving adherence.
[DESIGN] We conducted a qualitative study using semi-structured, in-depth interviews from September to December 2024.
[SETTING] The study was conducted at a large, university-affiliated healthcare centre which provides comprehensive health check-up services to a geographically diverse adult population.
[PARTICIPANTS] Individuals aged between 35 and 65 years old who had tested positive for n by 13C urea breath test in two consecutive annual health screenings and who had received their most recent screening results within the past 6 months were enrolled.
[RESULTS] Of the 23 participants involved in this study, 13 (56.5%) were male, with age ranging from 39 to 62 years. Five key themes emerged from the analysis: (1) Participants perceived as common but not serious, with limited understanding of its association with gastric cancer, (2) Physician recommendations and familial concerns acted as primary cues to treatment initiation, (3) Barriers included low perceived severity, reinfection concerns, side effects, time constraints and absence of symptoms or family history, (4) Adherence was challenged by treatment side effects and lack of follow-up testing and (5) Despite low treatment completion, participants reported engaging in preventive behaviours such as using separate utensils and reducing dining out.
[CONCLUSIONS] Barriers to eradication among health screening populations are multifaceted, involving informational deficits, cultural dining norms and logistical hurdles. Interventions should enhance physician-patient communication, emphasise follow-up testing and address misconceptions about reinfection and disease risk. Strengthening general practitioners' capacity for evidence-based management and integrating post-screening educational support are essential for improving eradication rates and reducing infection-related morbidity.
[DESIGN] We conducted a qualitative study using semi-structured, in-depth interviews from September to December 2024.
[SETTING] The study was conducted at a large, university-affiliated healthcare centre which provides comprehensive health check-up services to a geographically diverse adult population.
[PARTICIPANTS] Individuals aged between 35 and 65 years old who had tested positive for n by 13C urea breath test in two consecutive annual health screenings and who had received their most recent screening results within the past 6 months were enrolled.
[RESULTS] Of the 23 participants involved in this study, 13 (56.5%) were male, with age ranging from 39 to 62 years. Five key themes emerged from the analysis: (1) Participants perceived as common but not serious, with limited understanding of its association with gastric cancer, (2) Physician recommendations and familial concerns acted as primary cues to treatment initiation, (3) Barriers included low perceived severity, reinfection concerns, side effects, time constraints and absence of symptoms or family history, (4) Adherence was challenged by treatment side effects and lack of follow-up testing and (5) Despite low treatment completion, participants reported engaging in preventive behaviours such as using separate utensils and reducing dining out.
[CONCLUSIONS] Barriers to eradication among health screening populations are multifaceted, involving informational deficits, cultural dining norms and logistical hurdles. Interventions should enhance physician-patient communication, emphasise follow-up testing and address misconceptions about reinfection and disease risk. Strengthening general practitioners' capacity for evidence-based management and integrating post-screening educational support are essential for improving eradication rates and reducing infection-related morbidity.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Male; Helicobacter Infections; Female; Middle Aged; Adult; Helicobacter pylori; Qualitative Research; China; Tertiary Care Centers; Aged; Mass Screening; Breath Tests; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)
- Flap perfusion assessment with indocyanine green angiography in deep inferior epigastric perforator flap breast reconstruction: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- A case of pulmonary mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma with plasmacytic differentiation and amyloid deposition: case report and literature review.
- Role of ferroptosis and autophagy in pulmonary diseases.
- NUP62 Elevates USP10 Expression and Promotes Tamoxifen Resistance of Breast Cancer by Deubiquitinating ERα.
- Multi-omics analysis identifies a glycosyltransferase-related prognostic signature linked to the immune landscape in colorectal cancer.