| Literature DB >> 25147736 |
Sanne Rasmussen1, Jens Søndergaard1, Pia Veldt Larsen1, Kirubakaran Balasubramaniam1, Sandra Elnegaard1, Rikke Pilsgaard Svendsen1, Rikke Sand Andersen2, Anette Fischer Pedersen2, Peter Vedsted2, Dorte Ejg Jarbøl1.
Abstract
Introduction. In order to develop strategies to prevent delay in diagnosis, it is important to gain knowledge of symptoms and healthcare-seeking processes in the population. This paper describes a combined survey and register-based study with (1) focus on development of a questionnaire concerning experience of symptoms and subsequent consequences and (2) feasibility of the study. Methods. The study is a nationwide cohort study of 100 000 individuals randomly selected from the Danish general population. A comprehensive questionnaire concerning experience of symptoms and subsequent consequences was developed. The methodological framework for the development included defining the domains to be measured, identification of previous items, scales and questionnaires in the literature, and pilot and field testing. Results. A total of five domains and 16 subdomains were defined covering the area of symptom experience, symptom characteristics, reaction in response to symptom experience, external factors, and personality characteristics with potential influence on the symptom experience. In total, 49 706 questionnaires were completed, yielding a response rate of 52.2%. Conclusion. We developed a comprehensive questionnaire used in a large combined survey and register-based study concerning experience of symptoms and subsequent consequences of symptom experiences. We succeeded in conducting a large survey providing the groundwork for The Danish Symptom Cohort.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25147736 PMCID: PMC4132324 DOI: 10.1155/2014/187280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Family Med ISSN: 2090-2050
Domains in the questionnaire.
| Domains | Subdomains | Items |
|---|---|---|
| (1) Symptom experience | Specific and nonspecific cancer alarm symptoms | Alarm symptoms covering the following areas |
| Lung, gastrointestinal, gynaecological, and urogenital cancer | ||
| General, frequent symptoms | ||
| Fever | ||
| Feeling unwell | ||
| Feeling ill | ||
| Loss of appetite | ||
| Abdominal symptom-based conditions | Symptoms based on the consensus classification regarding dyspepsia and irritable bowel syndrome (the Rome III criteria) | |
| Symptoms forming the basis for diagnosis of gastroesophageal reflux disease (Montreal criteria) | ||
| Bodily distress syndrome | Items identified to classify BDS, covering the following areas | |
| Cardiopulmonary | ||
| Gastrointestinal | ||
| Musculoskeletal | ||
| General symptoms | ||
|
| ||
| (2) Symptom experience characteristics | Debut | First occurrence of the symptom experience |
| Impact on daily life | Impact of the symptom experience on daily life activities | |
| Concerns | The respondents' concerns regarding the symptom experience | |
|
| ||
| (3) Reactions in response to symptom experience | Use of social network | Discussion of symptom experience with friends, acquaintances, and family |
| Contact with the GP, other therapists, hospital doctors, community nurses, physiotherapists, etc. | ||
| Considerations about contact with the GP | Decisions of four barriers towards healthcare-seeking using the ABC (awareness and beliefs about cancer) | |
| “It would be embarrassing for me” | ||
| “I would be worried about wasting the doctor's time” | ||
| “I would be worried about what the doctor might find” | ||
| “I was too busy to find time to go to the doctor” | ||
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| ||
| (4) Selected factors with potential influence on the symptom experience and healthcare-seeking | Life style | Smoking |
| Alcohol consumption | ||
| Body mass index | ||
| Access to social network | Frequency of contact in terms of telephone conversations and/or communion with others | |
| Concerns for the respondent | The GP's and surroundings' reaction and concern for the respondent | |
| Experience with illness | Experience with serious illness in the immediate family and close friends | |
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| ||
| (5) Personality characteristics in relation to symptom experience and healthcare-seeking | Attitude towards risk-taking | Attitude towards risk in relation to health and finances |
| Self-rated health | Respondents assessment of own health | |
| Coping strategies | Respondents assessments of coping with problems using The Brief Approach/Avoidance Coping Questionnaire | |
The 44 included single symptom experiences.
| Tiredness | Erectile dysfunction |
| Night-time urination | Pelvic pain |
| Lack of energy | Shortness of breath |
| Headache | Hoarseness |
| Back pain | Urge incontinence |
| Abdominal bloating | Loss of appetite |
| Memory problems | Blood in stool/rectal bleeding |
| Abdominal pain | Pelvic pain during intercourse |
| Coughing | Fever |
| Concentration problems | Difficulty swallowing |
| Change in stool texture | Weight loss |
| Dizziness | Incontinence without stress/urge |
| Feeling unwell | Pain/burning when urinating |
| Constipation | Lump/swollen lymph node |
| Increase in waist circumference | Black stool |
| Change in stool frequency | Repeated vomiting |
| Diarrhea | Vaginal bleeding after intercourse |
| Nausea | Postmenopausal bleeding |
| Swollen legs | Blood in urine |
| Difficulty in emptying the bladder | Blood in semen |
| Frequent urination | Coughing up blood |
| Stress incontinence | Blood in vomit |
Figure 1Study cohort.
Results from the four waves.
| Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 | Wave 4 | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 25 000 | 25 000 | 25 000 | 25 000 | 100 000 |
| Men (%) | 12 203 (48.8) | 12 180 (48.7) | 12 348 (49.4) | 12 179 (48.7) | 48 910 (48.9) |
| Women (%) | 12 797 (51.2) | 12 820 (51.3) | 12 652 (50.6) | 12 821 (51.3) | 51 090 (51.1) |
|
| |||||
|
| 25 (0.1) | 78 (0.3) | 85 (0.3) | 127 (0.5) | 315 (0.3) |
|
| 247 (1.0) | 252 (1.0) | 236 (0.9) | 226 (0.9) | 961 (1.0) |
|
| 556 (2.2) | 480 (1.9) | 468 (1.9) | 468 (1.9) | 1 972 (2.0) |
|
| 233 (0.9) | 228 (0.9) | 195 (0.8) | 229 (0.9) | 885 (0.8) |
|
| 53 (0.2) | 172 (0.7) | 188 (0.8) | 201 (0.8) | 614 (0.6) |
|
| 1 114 (4.5) | 1 210 (4.8) | 1 172 (4.7) | 1 251 (5.0) | 4 747 (4.7) |
|
| |||||
|
| 23 886 (95.5) | 23 790 (95.2) | 23 828 (95.3) | 23 749 (95.0) | 95 253 (95.3) |
|
| 12 361 (51.7) | 12 763 (53.6) | 12 298 (51.6) | 12 284 (51.7) | 49 706 (52.2) |
| Men (%) | 5 718 (46.3) | 5 911 (46.3) | 5 815 (47.3) | 5 796 (47.2) | 23 240 (46.8) |
| Women (%) | 6 643 (53.7) | 6 852 (53.7) | 6 483 (52.7) | 6 488 (52.8) | 26 466 (53.3) |
| Median age (IQR) | 52 (40–64) | 52 (40–64) | 52 (40–64) | 52 (39–64) | 52 (40–64) |
|
| |||||
|
| 342 (2.8) | 308 (2.4) | 286 (2.3) | 272 (2.2) | 1 208 (2.4) |
| Men (%) | 129 (37.7) | 110 (35.7) | 93 (32.5) | 106 (39.0) | 438 (36.3) |
| Women (%) | 213 (62.3) | 198 (64.3) | 193 (67.5) | 166 (61.0) | 770 (63.7) |
| Median age (IQR) | 74 (67–79) | 74 (68–96) | 73 (68–80) | 74 (68–94) | 74 (68–96) |
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| |||||
|
| 6 437 (26.9) | 7 583 (31.9) | 7 559 (31.7) | 7 353 (31.0) | 28 932 (30.4) |
|
| 3 925 (43.4) | 3 130 (45.0) | 2 713 (43.1) | 2 908 (43.2) | 12 676 (43.7) |
|
| 1 999 (51.7) | 2 050 (53.6) | 2 026 (51.6) | 2 023 (51.7) | 8 098 (52.2) |
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| |||||
|
| 11 525 (48.3) | 11 027 (46.4) | 11 530 (48.4) | 11 465 (48.3) | 45 547 (47.8) |
| Not wishing to participate (indicated by telephone/email or postal contact) (%) | 6 880 (28.8) | 6 287 (26.4) | 6 407 (26.9) | 6 116 (25.8) | 25 690 (27.0) |
| Indicated “other reasons” for nonparticipation (%) | 11 (0.04) | 85 (0.4) | 99 (0.4) | 123 (0.5) | 318 (0.3) |
| Nonrespondents (no achieved contact in the reminder procedure) (%) | 4 634 (19.4) | 4 655 (19.6) | 5 024 (21.1) | 5 226 (22.0) | 19 539 (20.5) |