BACKGROUND: Previous studies have focused on the treatment received by rural cancer patients and have not examined their diagnostic pathways as reasons for poorer outcomes in rural Australia. OBJECTIVES: To compare and explore symptom appraisal and help-seeking behaviour in patients with breast, lung, prostate or colorectal cancer from rural Western Australia (WA). METHODS: A mixed-methods study of people recently diagnosed with breast, lung, prostate or colorectal cancer from rural WA. The time from first symptom to diagnosis (i.e. total diagnostic interval, TDI) was calculated from interviews and medical records. RESULTS: Sixty-six participants were recruited (24 breast, 20 colorectal, 14 prostate and 8 lung cancer patients). There was a highly significant difference in time from symptom onset to seeking help between cancers (P = 0.006). Geometric mean symptom appraisal for colorectal cancer was significantly longer than that for breast and lung cancers [geometric mean differences: 2.58 (95% confidence interval, CI: 0.64-4.53), P = 0.01; 3.97 (1.63-6.30), P = 0.001, respectively]. There was a significant overall difference in arithmetic mean TDI (P = 0.046); breast cancer TDI was significantly shorter than colorectal or prostate cancer TDI [mean difference : 266.3 days (95% CI: 45.9-486.8), P = 0.019; 277.0 days, (32.1-521.9), P = 0.027, respectively]. These differences were explained by the nature and personal interpretation of symptoms, perceived as well as real problems of access to health care, optimism, stoicism, machismo, fear, embarrassment and competing demands. CONCLUSIONS: Longer symptom appraisal was observed for colorectal cancer. Participants defined core characteristics of rural Australians as optimism, stoicism and machismo. These features, as well as access to health care, contribute to later presentation of cancer.
BACKGROUND: Previous studies have focused on the treatment received by rural cancerpatients and have not examined their diagnostic pathways as reasons for poorer outcomes in rural Australia. OBJECTIVES: To compare and explore symptom appraisal and help-seeking behaviour in patients with breast, lung, prostate or colorectal cancer from rural Western Australia (WA). METHODS: A mixed-methods study of people recently diagnosed with breast, lung, prostate or colorectal cancer from rural WA. The time from first symptom to diagnosis (i.e. total diagnostic interval, TDI) was calculated from interviews and medical records. RESULTS: Sixty-six participants were recruited (24 breast, 20 colorectal, 14 prostate and 8 lung cancerpatients). There was a highly significant difference in time from symptom onset to seeking help between cancers (P = 0.006). Geometric mean symptom appraisal for colorectal cancer was significantly longer than that for breast and lung cancers [geometric mean differences: 2.58 (95% confidence interval, CI: 0.64-4.53), P = 0.01; 3.97 (1.63-6.30), P = 0.001, respectively]. There was a significant overall difference in arithmetic mean TDI (P = 0.046); breast cancerTDI was significantly shorter than colorectal or prostate cancerTDI [mean difference : 266.3 days (95% CI: 45.9-486.8), P = 0.019; 277.0 days, (32.1-521.9), P = 0.027, respectively]. These differences were explained by the nature and personal interpretation of symptoms, perceived as well as real problems of access to health care, optimism, stoicism, machismo, fear, embarrassment and competing demands. CONCLUSIONS: Longer symptom appraisal was observed for colorectal cancer. Participants defined core characteristics of rural Australians as optimism, stoicism and machismo. These features, as well as access to health care, contribute to later presentation of cancer.
Authors: Fiona Crawford-Williams; Belinda Goodwin; Sonja March; Michael J Ireland; Melissa K Hyde; Suzanne K Chambers; Joanne F Aitken; Jeff Dunn Journal: Support Care Cancer Date: 2018-04-25 Impact factor: 3.603
Authors: Sarah McLachlan; Gemma Mansell; Tom Sanders; Sarah Yardley; Daniëlle van der Windt; Lucy Brindle; Carolyn Chew-Graham; Paul Little Journal: Fam Pract Date: 2015-06-22 Impact factor: 2.267
Authors: Sonya R Murray; Peter Murchie; Neil Campbell; Fiona M Walter; Danielle Mazza; Emily Habgood; Yvonne Kutzer; Andrew Martin; Stephen Goodall; David J Barnes; Jon D Emery Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2015-05-18 Impact factor: 2.692
Authors: Jon D Emery; Victoria Gray; Fiona M Walter; Shelley Cheetham; Emma J Croager; Terry Slevin; Christobel Saunders; Tim Threlfall; Kirsten Auret; Anna K Nowak; Elizabeth Geelhoed; Max Bulsara; C D'Arcy J Holman Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2014-09-17 Impact factor: 2.692