Clustering of chronic hepatitis B screening intentions in social networks of Moroccan immigrants in the Netherlands

Author:

Hamdiui NoraORCID,Buskens Vincent,van Steenbergen Jim E.,Kretzschmar Mirjam E. E.,Rocha Luis E. C.,Thorson Anna E.,Timen Aura,Wong Albert,van den Muijsenbergh Maria,Stein Mart L.

Abstract

Abstract Background Early detection, identification, and treatment of chronic hepatitis B through screening is vital for those at increased risk, e.g. born in hepatitis B endemic countries. In the Netherlands, Moroccan immigrants show low participation rates in health-related screening programmes. Since social networks influence health behaviour, we investigated whether similar screening intentions for chronic hepatitis B cluster within social networks of Moroccan immigrants. Methods We used respondent-driven sampling (RDS) where each participant (“recruiter”) was asked to complete a questionnaire and to recruit three Moroccans (“recruitees”) from their social network. Logistic regression analyses were used to analyse whether the recruiters’ intention to request a screening test was similar to the intention of their recruitees. Results We sampled 354 recruiter-recruitee pairs: for 154 pairs both participants had a positive screening intention, for 68 pairs both had a negative screening intention, and the remaining 132 pairs had a discordant intention to request a screening test. A tie between a recruiter and recruitee was associated with having the same screening intention, after correction for sociodemographic variables (OR 1.70 [1.15–2.51]). Conclusions The findings of our pilot study show clustering of screening intention among individuals in the same network. This provides opportunities for social network interventions to encourage participation in hepatitis B screening initiatives.

Funder

Rijksinstituut voor Volksgezondheid en Milieu

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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