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- Title
Awareness and attitudes regarding Helicobacter pylori infection in Chinese physicians and public population: A national cross‐sectional survey.
- Authors
Wu, You; Su, Tun; Zhou, Xianzhu; Lu, Nonghua; Li, Zhaoshen; Du, Yiqi
- Abstract
Background: There is a lack of reports on the awareness of Helicobacter pylori (H pylori) prevention and treatment in the general Chinese population. And whether the knowledge level will affect their action toward screening was unknown. This study aimed to conduct a national survey on the knowledge, attitudes, and practice regarding H pylori infection in Chinese physicians and the public. Methods: This was an Internet‐based survey of the general Chinese population and Chinese physicians from different specialties, carried out from January to February 2019. Both surveys (general population's and physicians') included questions to assess the knowledge and attitudes toward H pylori and its action. Results: A total of 3211 people and 546 physicians were enrolled. In the population, the proportion of subjects who answered correctly to all questions about H pylori's infectivity was only 16%, and that for H pylori's harmfulness and that for H pylori preventive measures were 35% and 43.6%, respectively. In general, physicians had a better understanding of H pylori's harmfulness (83.9%) than the other population. The vast majority of the surveyed population (87.0%) and physicians (82.2%) supported a national H pylori screening plan to prevent gastric cancer. The support ratio paralleled with the overall knowledge level. Unexpectedly, gastroenterologists tend to have a relatively low support rate for H pylori screening than non‐gastroenterologists (58.2% vs 84.2%, P <.001), which may be related to consideration of heavy medical burden (67.3%). Conclusions: The general population in China has relatively insufficient awareness of H pylori, which is incompatible with the highly infectious status. More works on health education are needed to improve the knowledge of this gastric pathogen.
- Subjects
CHINA; HELICOBACTER pylori infections; GASTROENTEROLOGISTS; CHINESE people; ACUPUNCTURISTS; PHYSICIANS; INTERNET surveys; HELICOBACTER pylori
- Publication
Helicobacter, 2020, Vol 25, Issue 4, p1
- ISSN
1083-4389
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/hel.12705