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Communities against cancer: a qualitative study assessing the effectiveness of a community engagement initiative in improving cancer awareness for marginalised communities

Communities against cancer: a qualitative study assessing the effectiveness of a community engagement initiative in improving cancer awareness for marginalised communities
Communities against cancer: a qualitative study assessing the effectiveness of a community engagement initiative in improving cancer awareness for marginalised communities
Background: marginalised communities (including minoritised ethnic groups and people with lower socioeconomic status) often present with a late cancer stage at diagnosis, affecting survival. This is due to many factors including cultural barriers, mistrust of health services and low levels of cancer awareness. Communities Against Cancer (CAC) aimed to promote cancer awareness and healthy lifestyles and help-seeking behaviours for marginalised communities through a grant-scheme that provided funding for community-led projects, which ran from 1st January 2021 – 31st December 2022. This paper reports findings from a study that assessed whether CAC met its aims and the characteristics of successfully delivered projects.

Methods: a qualitative approach was used involving interviews and observations of meetings and community activities, supported by documentary analysis of minutes, grant applications, reports and quantitative descriptions of grant-level data. Participants included representatives from the funder and grant distributor, community advocates, applicants and recipients of CAC funding. Thirty-seven people were interviewed, all of whom were invited to a second follow-up interview. Twenty-one participants agreed to a second interview, resulting in 58 interviews in total. Interview transcripts and observation fieldnotes were analysed thematically.

Results: CAC community grants encouraged: 1) healthy behaviours (e.g. families on low incomes reported healthier diets); 2) screening and PSA testing uptake (e.g. a group representing neurodivergent people created a film of a breast screening unit, encouraging attendance); 3) awareness of signs and symptoms (e.g. one radio station for South Asian communities broadcast an episode on signs of prostate cancer, their most downloaded programme); 4) help seeking behaviours (e.g. one South Asian community group held meetings with pharmacists, primary care and hospital staff, building trust with local services). Seven characteristics were identified for successful projects (defined as meeting at least one of the initiative’s aims: raising awareness of healthy behaviours, screening uptake, awareness of signs and symptoms, and help-seeking behaviour). The characteristics were: 1) projects are designed with an understanding of the community; 2) effective planning before delivery; 3) projects are co-created with the community; 4) alignment with group values; 5) building community members’ confidence; 6) effective communication; 7) adaptability and evaluation.

Conclusions: the community-based grant model adopted by CAC enabled community members to self-define effective strategies to deliver cancer messages to their communities. As a result, the CAC initiative met its aims of promoting cancer awareness, encouraging healthy lifestyles and help-seeking behaviours by ensuring activites were fully tailored and co-created with marginalised communities.
Cancer awareness, Cancer prevention, Early detection, Equality and diversity, Marginalised communities
1471-2458
Wright, David
a55be721-4b15-4555-bf61-73fcb75c1a39
Foster, Rebecca
74f75d51-0db1-4044-bd77-3ab87e6846ff
Miles, Phoebe
1e092581-f94d-490a-ad58-f6ba9ffae408
Duffield, Nicola
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Rickard, Sally
2193cec4-019a-45ac-ada9-28369e2b6f77
Frankland, Jane
94f07ae3-6361-4572-b716-6fdc4ba3c75a
Calman, Lynn
9ae254eb-74a7-4906-9eb4-62ad99f058c1
Foster, Claire
00786ac1-bd47-4aeb-a0e2-40e058695b73
Wright, David
a55be721-4b15-4555-bf61-73fcb75c1a39
Foster, Rebecca
74f75d51-0db1-4044-bd77-3ab87e6846ff
Miles, Phoebe
1e092581-f94d-490a-ad58-f6ba9ffae408
Duffield, Nicola
81c09d67-6b5a-4c2e-a6d0-6e72a0dfc610
Rickard, Sally
2193cec4-019a-45ac-ada9-28369e2b6f77
Frankland, Jane
94f07ae3-6361-4572-b716-6fdc4ba3c75a
Calman, Lynn
9ae254eb-74a7-4906-9eb4-62ad99f058c1
Foster, Claire
00786ac1-bd47-4aeb-a0e2-40e058695b73

Wright, David, Foster, Rebecca, Miles, Phoebe, Duffield, Nicola, Rickard, Sally, Frankland, Jane, Calman, Lynn and Foster, Claire (2025) Communities against cancer: a qualitative study assessing the effectiveness of a community engagement initiative in improving cancer awareness for marginalised communities. BMC Public Health, 25 (1), [2011]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-025-23179-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: marginalised communities (including minoritised ethnic groups and people with lower socioeconomic status) often present with a late cancer stage at diagnosis, affecting survival. This is due to many factors including cultural barriers, mistrust of health services and low levels of cancer awareness. Communities Against Cancer (CAC) aimed to promote cancer awareness and healthy lifestyles and help-seeking behaviours for marginalised communities through a grant-scheme that provided funding for community-led projects, which ran from 1st January 2021 – 31st December 2022. This paper reports findings from a study that assessed whether CAC met its aims and the characteristics of successfully delivered projects.

Methods: a qualitative approach was used involving interviews and observations of meetings and community activities, supported by documentary analysis of minutes, grant applications, reports and quantitative descriptions of grant-level data. Participants included representatives from the funder and grant distributor, community advocates, applicants and recipients of CAC funding. Thirty-seven people were interviewed, all of whom were invited to a second follow-up interview. Twenty-one participants agreed to a second interview, resulting in 58 interviews in total. Interview transcripts and observation fieldnotes were analysed thematically.

Results: CAC community grants encouraged: 1) healthy behaviours (e.g. families on low incomes reported healthier diets); 2) screening and PSA testing uptake (e.g. a group representing neurodivergent people created a film of a breast screening unit, encouraging attendance); 3) awareness of signs and symptoms (e.g. one radio station for South Asian communities broadcast an episode on signs of prostate cancer, their most downloaded programme); 4) help seeking behaviours (e.g. one South Asian community group held meetings with pharmacists, primary care and hospital staff, building trust with local services). Seven characteristics were identified for successful projects (defined as meeting at least one of the initiative’s aims: raising awareness of healthy behaviours, screening uptake, awareness of signs and symptoms, and help-seeking behaviour). The characteristics were: 1) projects are designed with an understanding of the community; 2) effective planning before delivery; 3) projects are co-created with the community; 4) alignment with group values; 5) building community members’ confidence; 6) effective communication; 7) adaptability and evaluation.

Conclusions: the community-based grant model adopted by CAC enabled community members to self-define effective strategies to deliver cancer messages to their communities. As a result, the CAC initiative met its aims of promoting cancer awareness, encouraging healthy lifestyles and help-seeking behaviours by ensuring activites were fully tailored and co-created with marginalised communities.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 May 2025
Published date: 31 May 2025
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2025.
Keywords: Cancer awareness, Cancer prevention, Early detection, Equality and diversity, Marginalised communities

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 503065
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503065
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: bae0edca-7206-4eec-b42d-1bdcde1488a2
ORCID for David Wright: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4857-5084
ORCID for Rebecca Foster: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9320-4269
ORCID for Phoebe Miles: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5707-6709
ORCID for Jane Frankland: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3813-8879
ORCID for Lynn Calman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9964-6017
ORCID for Claire Foster: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4703-8378

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Jul 2025 16:39
Last modified: 22 Jul 2025 02:15

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Contributors

Author: David Wright ORCID iD
Author: Rebecca Foster ORCID iD
Author: Phoebe Miles ORCID iD
Author: Nicola Duffield
Author: Sally Rickard
Author: Jane Frankland ORCID iD
Author: Lynn Calman ORCID iD
Author: Claire Foster ORCID iD

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