| Literature DB >> 25734385 |
K L Whitaker1, S E Scott2, J Wardle3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sociodemographic inequalities in the stage of diagnosis and cancer survival may be partly due to differences in the appraisal interval (time from noticing a bodily change to perceiving a reason to discuss symptoms with a health-care professional). A number of symptom appraisal models have been developed describing the psychological factors that underlie how people make sense of symptoms, although none explicitly focus on sociodemographic characteristics.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25734385 PMCID: PMC4385973 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2015.39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Summary of symptom appraisal models
| Situational adaption model | Bodily sensations appraised within a social and cultural reality. Key assumption is that people are able to ‘contain' or side-line signs and symptoms within socially defined situations. | Identity: how bodily signs/sensations are understood as symptoms in the social and cultural arena. | |
| Self-regulation theory/common sense model of illness | Representations of illness appraised and coped with according to self-regulation model. On detecting a bodily change, selection of coping response is driven by emotion and components of illness representations: identity (label), cause (attribution), timeline (duration), consequences (impact on daily life) and curability/control. Emphasises role of re-appraisals within a self-regulatory system. | Knowledge (i.e. symptom label), expectation-based biases, identity (e.g. roles). | |
| Illness action model | Sociological model of symptom perception. Bodily sensations may cause a ‘disturbance in equilibrium', which people seek to reconcile to continue as normal. Bodily sensations are perceived, interpreted and acted on and the outcome is evaluated. | Attention (competing demands), knowledge, identity (e.g. influence of others) | |
| Cue competition theory | Appraisal of symptoms depends on cognitive resources available, when external sensory information is limited, more cognitive resources can be deployed to internal bodily sensations. | Attentional processes | |
| Cognitive perceptual model of symptom perception | Symptom appraisal comprised of meaning assignment, perceptual attention, and situational influences. Encompasses medical and psychosocial perspectives and role of attentional processing. Once bodily change detected, the search for a cause begins. Links to Pennebaker's theory. | Knowledge, attentional processes, expectation-based biases, identity | |
| Psychophysiological comparison theory | Assumes people are motivated to maintain a reasonable physiological condition. Proposes several principles of symptom appraisal including: attribution (cause), logical consistency (familiarity), optimistic bias, comorbidity (number of symptoms). | Knowledge, expectation-based biases (e.g. optimism/pessimism), identity | |
| Symptom interpretation model (SIM) | Builds on Leventhal's Common Sense Model of Illness. Focuses on symptom experience from an intrapersonal perspective, where the interaction of knowledge and attribution of symptoms is considered critical. | Knowledge, expectation-based biases (i.e. heuristics, rules of thumb) | |
| Kolk's symptom perception model | ( | Developed from Cioffi and Pennebaker's work. Highlights the effects of trait negative affect, selective attention and external stressors. | Attentional processes |
| Symptom and illness attitude model (SIAM) | Synthesises/integrates models of illness and bodily sensations. Identifies moderators in forming mental representations of symptoms that may be promising targets for intervention. | Expectation-based biases (i.e. role of beliefs and emotion), identity (i.e. self-complexity). |
Figure 1The influence of sociodemographic factors and psychosocial ‘elements' on symptom appraisal. Demonstration of how sociodemographic factors may influence the psychosocial ‘elements' of symptom appraisal. Responses to interpretation may be re-evaluated, leading to new cycles of detection and interpretation. Knowledge is defined as familiarity, awareness or understanding of bodily sensations acquired through experience or education. Attention is defined as focussing on relevant stimuli while ignoring distractors. Expectation encompasses pre-existing beliefs, contextual biases and general heuristics (i.e., shortcuts). Identity refers to the distinct characteristics of an individual and their role in society.
Examples of possible future intervention research
| Knowledge | Target public awareness campaigns at demographic groups where awareness and health literacy are known to be low |
| Attention | Emphasise short-term benefits of presenting with symptoms (e.g. reassurance), alongside long-term gains (e.g. early diagnosis) |
| Target demographic groups where body vigilance is known to be lower, offering practical action plans | |
| Expectation | ‘Myth buster' campaigns targeted at age and sex stereotypes |
| Raise awareness of age-related risk | |
| Identity | Increase the public's confidence in cancer as a curable/survivable disease |
| Harness positive influence of social support | |
| Community level interventions |