Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Biology | |
Evaluation of MeTree for Family Health History Collection in Sri Lanka | |
article | |
Ruoyu Hu1  Vijitha De Silva2  Lori Orlando3  Truls Østbye4  | |
[1] Graduate of Master of Science in Global Health Program at Duke Global Health Institute, currently Based in Kunming, Yunnan province;Faculty of Medicine, University of Ruhuna;Duke Center for Applied, Genomics and Precision Medicine, Duke Executive Health, 102906, Aesthetic Center 2nd Floor;Community and Family Medicine, Nursing and Global Health. Erwin Square | |
关键词: Family health history; MeTree; Cancer screening; Disease occurrence; Participants’ experience; Usefulness; Sri Lanka; | |
DOI : 10.31557/apjcb.2022.7.1.51-54 | |
学科分类:土木及结构工程学 | |
来源: West Asia Organization for Cancer Prevention | |
【 摘 要 】
Introduction: Information about family history of illnesses including hereditary cancers is increasingly important to ensure each patient receives optimal health promotion advice, preventive health services and appropriate screening or treatment. MeTree is an American, validated, web-based family health history based risk assessment tool that collects data directly from patients. Little is known about its utility in countries with different disease profiles, health care infrastructure and policies, and cultural and socioeconomic contexts. Methods: This study enrolled 304 medical students from the University of Ruhuna in Sri Lanka. Participants constructed family pedigrees and entered their information into MeTree, as well as completed a paper-based questionnaire asking about their experience with and perceived benefits of MeTree. Results: 3302 records and 87 different diseases were entered into MeTree for all index participants and their relatives. Diabetes was the most common disease reported and accounted for 24.6% of all diseases reported. The mean time to enter information into MeTree was 36.3 minutes. Questionnaire responses indicated a high level of satisfaction with the use of MeTree and the perceived benefit was high. No significant difference was observed in completion time or survey responses by age or gender. Conclusions: Most medical students found MeTree easy to complete and considered it a useful experience. The majority thought it possible to generalize MeTree to the context of Sri Lanka, though barriers, such as limited internet access, will need to be addressed to integrate a web-based tool, like MeTree, into routine practice in Sri Lankan clinics.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
【 预 览 】
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RO202307120004250ZK.pdf | 254KB | download |