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Doctoral Candidate Brochure: Amal Alawami

Doctoral Dissertation Defense
of
Amal Alawami


For the degree of

Doctor of Philosophy
Health Education and Promotion

Behavioral Intention Towards Practicing Breast Self-Examination Among Saudi Female College Students

 

December 3, 2025
12:00 p.m.
Nixson Hall Conference Room

Behavioral Intention Towards Practicing Breast Self-Examination Among Saudi Female College Students

The purpose of this quantitative study was to investigate the intention of Saudi female undergraduate students at King Faisal University (KFU) to perform breast self-examination (BSE) routinely once a month as a method of early breast cancer (BC) detection. A modified version of the Theory of Planned Behavior was used as the conceptual framework to examine the impact of knowledge, fatalism, attitude, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control on students' intention to practice BSE regularly, as well as the relationships among these factors.

An online cross-sectional survey design was employed to collect data from Saudi female full-time undergraduate students aged 18 to 25 enrolled in non-health-related colleges at KFU. A total of 261 students completed the survey. Data were analyzed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS).

The findings of this study revealed students had a positive attitude, perceived behavioral control, and intention toward performing BSE routinely once a month, while maintaining a neutral subjective norm. Students also demonstrated moderate BSE knowledge and low BC fatalism. The analysis revealed attitude, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control, and fatalism were significant predictors of intention with perceived behavioral control the strongest predictor. The findings highlighted the need to develop targeted breast health education programs in Saudi college settings to strengthen young women's confidence and BSE technical skills for doing BSE, to correct misconceptions, and to promote consistent BSE practice as part of early BC detection efforts.

About the Candidate

Amal Alawami

MS, Health Services Administration
University of Evansville

BS, Respiratory Care
King Faisal University

Amal is a lecturer at King Faisal University. Her research interest primarily focuses on women's health, with a particular emphasis on the prevention of breast cancer among young Saudi women. She has actively participated in many college-based breast cancer awareness initiatives, including educational campaigns and workshops. These experiences have strengthened her passion for developing culturally sensitive intervention programs aimed at promoting breast cancer awareness and early detection among female college students.

Doctoral Dissertation Committee

Co-Directors

Kele Ding, Ph.D.
Professor
Health Education and Promotion
School of Health Science

Donna Bernert, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Health Education and Promotion
School of Health Science

Members

Laurie Wagner, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Health Education and Promotion
School of Health Science

Sonya Wisdom, Ph.D.
Professor
Science Education
School of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum Studies

Graduate Faculty Representative

Joanne Caniglia, Ph.D.
Professor
Adolescent and Young Adult Education
School of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum Studies