Researchers analyzed existing studies to understand how common breast self-examination is in low- and middle-income countries. They combined data from multiple reviews that included over 110,000 participants across these regions. The goal was to get a clearer picture of how many women regularly check their own breasts for changes.
The analysis found that about 32% of women in these countries practice breast self-examination. This means roughly one in three women performs these checks. The researchers also looked at factors that might influence whether women do these exams, though they didn't measure how effective the exams are at finding cancer.
There's an important limitation to consider: the studies included in this review showed very different results from each other. This high variation means the 32% estimate isn't precise—the actual percentage could reasonably be anywhere from about 23% to 41% across different communities. The review only tells us about current practices, not whether breast self-exams actually improve health outcomes.
This research gives health planners a broad sense of how common breast self-examination is in lower-income countries. It highlights that most women in these regions aren't doing regular self-exams, which could inform education efforts. However, because the data comes from observational studies with mixed results, we can't draw firm conclusions about why women do or don't practice self-exams.