Literature DB >> 26235092

Gaining control over breast cancer risk: Transforming vulnerability, uncertainty, and the future through clinical trial participation - a qualitative study.

Christine Holmberg1, Katie Whitehouse1, Mary Daly2, Worta McCaskill-Stevens3.   

Abstract

Concepts of disease risk and its management are central to processes of medicalisation and pharmaceuticalisation. Through a narrative perspective, this paper aims to understand how such macro-level developments may (or may not) be experienced individually, and how an algorithm that is used for recruitment into a clinical trial may structure individual notions of being 'at risk' and 'in need of treatment'. We interviewed 31 women participating in the Study of Tamoxifen and Raloxifene (STAR), a chemoprevention trial conducted in the US between 1999 and 2006. Interviews were thematically analysed. Women in the study had experienced the threat of breast cancer and felt vulnerable to developing the disease prior to STAR participation. The diagnosis of 'being at risk' for cancer through an algorithm that determined risk-eligibility for STAR, opened up the possibility for the women to heal. The trial became a means to recognise and collectivise the women's experiences of vulnerability. Through medication intake, being cared for by study coordinators, and the sense of community with other STAR participants, trial participation worked to transform women's lives. Such transformative experiences may nevertheless have been temporary, enduring only as long as the close links to the medical institution through trial participation lasted.
© 2015 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness.

Entities:  

Keywords:  breast cancer; narrative method; randomised controlled trials (RCT)

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26235092      PMCID: PMC4609249          DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12307

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  22 in total

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  6 in total

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Authors:  Christine Holmberg; Zubin Farahani; Claudia M Witt
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Review 2.  The sociology of cancer: a decade of research.

Authors:  Anne Kerr; Emily Ross; Gwen Jacques; Sarah Cunningham-Burley
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2018-02-15

3.  Risk accuracy of type 2 diabetes in middle aged adults: Associations with sociodemographic, clinical, psychological and behavioural factors.

Authors:  Barbora Silarova; Fiona E Douglas; Juliet A Usher-Smith; Job G Godino; Simon J Griffin
Journal:  Patient Educ Couns       Date:  2017-07-21

4.  Understanding low chemoprevention uptake by women at high risk of breast cancer: findings from a qualitative inductive study of women's risk-reduction experiences.

Authors:  Tasleem J Padamsee; Megan Hils; Anna Muraveva
Journal:  BMC Womens Health       Date:  2021-04-16       Impact factor: 2.809

5.  Optimising recruitment to a late-phase tuberculosis clinical trial: a qualitative study exploring patient and practitioner experiences in Uzbekistan.

Authors:  Alexandra Wharton-Smith; Shona Horter; Emma Douch; Nell Gray; Nicola James; Bern-Thomas Nyang'wa; Jatinder Singh; Parpieva Nargiza Nusratovna; Zinaida Tigay; Emil Kazounis; Gulayim Allanazarova; Beverley Stringer
Journal:  Trials       Date:  2021-12-04       Impact factor: 2.279

6.  "There is nothing better than participating in this study": Living the PAPAartis cardiovascular randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Nuria Romo-Avilés; Johanna Fröhlich Zapata; Alena Keuneke; David Petroff; Christian D Etz; David Epstein
Journal:  Contemp Clin Trials Commun       Date:  2022-09-03
  6 in total

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