Research Article

Public health workers' cancer screening knowledge levels and affecting factors,

Number: 1 July 7, 2026

Public health workers' cancer screening knowledge levels and affecting factors,

Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine public health workers' cancer screening knowledge levels and affecting factors. 
Methods: This cross-sectional study was carried out with healthcare workers working in the Public Health Services Presidency (PHSP), Community Health Centre (CHC), and Healthy Life Centre (HLC) units in May 2024. A Personal Data Form and Cancer Screening Knowledge Scale (CSKS) were applied. 
Results: Of the healthcare workers, 203 participated in the study (participation rate 84%). The mean age was 39.8±8.9 years. Of the participants, 72.4% (n=147) did not exercise regularly, 54.7% (n=111) had healthy eating habits, 34.5% (n=70) had previously been screened for cancer, and 83.3% (n=169) had recommended cancer screening to others/the community. The mean score on the CSKS was 18.2±3.1, and most (n = 149, 73.4%) had a high-level cancer screening knowledge. The mean score on the CSKS was higher in women (p<0.001), those with at least one child (p=0.006), those who reported regular exercise (p=0.033), those with a university degree (p=0.008) or higher (p=0.001), those who had previously been screened (p=0.009), and those who had recommended it to others/community (p=0.002). These variables were entered in the regression model, and only being a physician was significantly associated with higher knowledge levels about cancer screening (p=0.017). 
Conclusion: Nearly three-quarters of public health workers had a high level of cancer screening knowledge. It was believed that the importance of cancer screening should be explained to all healthcare professionals, especially those with limited knowledge about this issue (in-service training, awareness activities, etc.). 

Keywords

Early Diagnosis of Cancer, Public Health, Community Health Workers, Health Knowledge Attitudes Practice

Ethical Statement

The study was approved by the Sivas Cumhuriyet University Non Interventional Research Ethics Committee (Decision no: 2024-03/34, Date: 21.03.2024).

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APA
Akova, İ., & Hasdemir, Ö. (2026). Public health workers’ cancer screening knowledge levels and affecting factors,. Turkish Journal of Public Health, 1. https://doi.org/10.20518/tjph.1768694
AMA
1.Akova İ, Hasdemir Ö. Public health workers’ cancer screening knowledge levels and affecting factors,. TJPH. 2026;(1). doi:10.20518/tjph.1768694
Chicago
Akova, İrem, and Öznur Hasdemir. 2026. “Public Health Workers’ Cancer Screening Knowledge Levels and Affecting Factors”,. Turkish Journal of Public Health, no. 1. https://doi.org/10.20518/tjph.1768694.
EndNote
Akova İ, Hasdemir Ö (July 1, 2026) Public health workers’ cancer screening knowledge levels and affecting factors,. Turkish Journal of Public Health 1
IEEE
[1]İ. Akova and Ö. Hasdemir, “Public health workers’ cancer screening knowledge levels and affecting factors”, TJPH, no. 1, July 2026, doi: 10.20518/tjph.1768694.
ISNAD
Akova, İrem - Hasdemir, Öznur. “Public Health Workers’ Cancer Screening Knowledge Levels and Affecting Factors”,. Turkish Journal of Public Health. 1 (July 1, 2026). https://doi.org/10.20518/tjph.1768694.
JAMA
1.Akova İ, Hasdemir Ö. Public health workers’ cancer screening knowledge levels and affecting factors,. TJPH. 2026. doi:10.20518/tjph.1768694.
MLA
Akova, İrem, and Öznur Hasdemir. “Public Health Workers’ Cancer Screening Knowledge Levels and Affecting Factors”,. Turkish Journal of Public Health, no. 1, July 2026, doi:10.20518/tjph.1768694.
Vancouver
1.İrem Akova, Öznur Hasdemir. Public health workers’ cancer screening knowledge levels and affecting factors,. TJPH. 2026 Jul. 1;(1). doi:10.20518/tjph.1768694