| Literature DB >> 33131021 |
Mohamad M Saab1, Caroline Kilty2, Brendan Noonan2, Serena FitzGerald2, Abigail Collins3, Áine Lyng3, Una Kennedy3, Josephine Hegarty2.
Abstract
Lung cancer (LC) is the most common cancer and the leading cause of cancer mortality globally. A positive association between LC incidence and socioeconomic deprivation exists. High-risk individuals are less likely to be aware of LC and to correctly appraise LC symptoms and seek medical help accordingly. This qualitative study explored strategies to promote early detection of LC among at-risk individuals living in high-incidence areas in Ireland. Five semi-structured focus groups were conducted with 46 individuals. Data were collected face-to-face in community centres and organisations in high-incidence areas in two Irish counties and analysed using inductive qualitative content analysis. Participants believed that there was insufficient information regarding LC and recommended promoting LC awareness at a young rather than old age. They favoured public health messages that are Simple, clear, and honest; Worded positively; Incorporating a shock element; Featuring a celebrity, healthcare professional, or survivor; and Targeted (SWIFT). Most participants reported becoming immune to messages on cigarette packaging and recommended using a combination of broadcast and print media within national government-run campaigns to promote LC awareness and early detection. Study findings suggest that promoting LC awareness, help-seeking, early presentation, and diagnosis can be achieved by developing and testing targeted interventions. Promoting LC awareness requires a multi-sectoral policy network, or a whole systems approach. Such approaches ought to consider the multifactorial drivers of LC risk behaviours; involve coordinated, collective actions across various stakeholders; operate across multiple agencies; and take a life course perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Awareness; Early detection; Focus group; Health disparity; Health promotion; Lung cancer; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33131021 PMCID: PMC9399198 DOI: 10.1007/s13187-020-01916-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Educ ISSN: 0885-8195 Impact factor: 1.771
Participant characteristicsa
| Characteristic | n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | Range | 51–90 |
| Mean (standard deviation) | 68.5 (10.5) | |
| Gender | Female | 30 (65.2) |
| Male | 16 (34.8) | |
| Nationality | Irish | 45 (97.8) |
| English | 1 (2.2) | |
| Marital status | Married | 17 (37) |
| Widowed | 13 (28.3) | |
| Single | 6 (13) | |
| Divorced | 5 (10.9) | |
| Separated | 3 (6.5) | |
| Partnered | 2 (4.3) | |
| Education | Primary | 19 (41.3) |
| Secondary | 19 (41.3) | |
| University/college | 8 (17.4) | |
| Employment | Retired | 27 (58.7) |
| Employed (part-time) | 9 (19.6) | |
| Disabled | 3 (6.5) | |
| Unemployed | 3 (6.5) | |
| Homemaker | 2 (4.3) | |
| Employed (full-time) | 1 (2.2) | |
| Volunteer | 1 (2.2) | |
| Occupationb | Cleaner | 2 (20) |
| Day-care assistant | 2 (20) | |
| Maintenance | 2 (20) | |
| Other | 4 (40) | |
| Health insurance | Medical card | 40 (87) |
| Private insurance | 2 (4.3) | |
| Medical card and insurance | 2 (4.3) | |
| General practitioner card and insurance | 1 (2.2) | |
| Medical and general practitioner cards | 1 (2.2) | |
| Address | Urban | 30 (82.6) |
| Rural | 8 (17.4) | |
| Living arrangement | Own | 22 (47.8) |
| Rent from local authority | 17 (37) | |
| Mortgage | 3 (6.5) | |
| Living with family/friends | 2 (4.3) | |
| Rent privately | 2 (4.3) | |
| Smoking status | Smoker | 22 (47.8) |
| Ex-smoker | 17 (37) | |
| Never smoked | 6 (13) | |
| Social smoker | 1 (2.2) | |
| Cigarettes per dayc | Range | 10–40 |
| Mean (standard deviation) | 18.4 (7.2) | |
| Years smokingc | Range | 20–75 |
| Mean (standard deviation) | 44.4 (13.5) | |
an = 46 unless otherwise indicated
bn = 10 participants who were employed
cn = 22 participants who were current smokers
Study findings with participants’ verbatims
| Information needs | |
| “There isn’t enough information out there” | “There isn’t enough information out there to tell us about what’s this and what’s that…I think there should be more information…and I truthfully say there’s never been anything like that [focus group discussion] started in this country.” (FG3) |
| Need for information on early signs, symptoms, and risk | “What you’re actually looking for, not the changes in your voice or you’re coughing. What is it you’re actually looking for the early stages of cancer because I don’t know any of them?...I think if you were made more aware of, what kind of coughs you’re looking for, it would make you think more…” (FG1) |
| “It’s too late for us… target young people” | “That’s too late for us…I can’t understand why people are targeting older people. Why aren’t they targeting young people starting off?...” (FG2) “For us, our days are coming to a, well, the near end…like me, I started taking instalments out for my funeral. That’s my age, but it’s to get the lung cancer thing at an early age. We’ll say show somebody like yourselves [interviewers] or younger…somebody who will look at that. There’s no point in showing it to me.” (FG3) |
| Suggestions for effective public health messaging | |
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| “Clarity, and simplicity in messages targeted to help them [at-risk individuals] become more aware of symptoms and what they need to do in case they felt a symptom…If you went to a doctor and you said you smoked X amount a day and then the doctor literally said he did some tests on you and it’s not looking good and if you don’t quit smoking in the next seven to 10 days, whatever means you need to quit, you won’t be around in six months’ time. Well, guess what, you’re going to go out of there with food for thought…that would make a hell of a lot of people quit thinking oh, I’ve got six months.” (FG1) |
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| “I read a leaflet and they said how much money you’d save and I’m sorry, but that kind of did it…a family holiday and of course you feel like the worst mother in the world then because you can’t bring your children on holidays because you’re smoking.” (FG1) “There was a [message] saying the day after you give up smoking, your lungs start to recover.” (FG4) |
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| “If you look at the charity advertisements for Africa and you see a lady with a baby in her hand and they’re looking for money to help, to sort this problem out, if you have the same thing with a new-born baby and a mother holding her and say this baby smokes 60 cigarettes a day, how long is this baby going to live? Just something…a shock.” (FG5) |
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| “They should really give a good ad, some well-known boy or girl to say a few words. Some young celebrity that is well-known and the caption underneath him or better still, if the camera was on him and the mic near him, that you could hear him saying the words.” (FG3) |
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| “You don’t need these pictures [on cigarette packaging]. God forgive me for saying this, but I don’t need to be told smoking will make me impotent. I’ve three kids and I smoked all my life. But keep it simple and get people, aim it at a younger age group who will take it on board. Like aim it at maybe a slightly different type of leaflet for people in our age group. The same information, but a different format.” (FG3) |
| Information platforms and preferred learning strategies | |
| Sources of previous information | “In the sixties, I remember in [shop name] there was this Conquer Cancer campaign. They only discovered that…they proved that smoking caused cancer. Up to then, there wasn’t because they would be no…all the labels then on the cigarettes, they had to have a label to say that smoking causes cancer, but before that, it was never proven. So, when it was proved, they had this big campaign going on the television, on the radio, things like that, Conquer Cancer, stop smoking.” (FG5) |
| Multimodal campaigns | “I think myself a video should be done, a recording of some sort. You have a smoker that has cancer and then you have a survivor that had cancer and gave up the fags [cigarettes]. And it would be good awareness of the difference of both and let the two sides tell the story. Why this person, even though they have cancer, why they can’t give up the fags or why they feel it’s not necessary to give them up or why they started smoking. The other person, why they gave them up, how long they were smoking before and what possessed them to start smoking in the first place…” (FG2) “Why don’t you have an advertisement and you had say the likes of us and we have a room and you have one person just cough and then you progress to three weeks later? And then you send the message out. That cough was cancer.” (FG4) “Department of Education, should get the leaflets to all schools…Department of Health or the HSE [Health Service Executive] should have a leaflet and give it out to everybody or have it up in the chapels, churches, chemist, doctors, dentists…anywhere where [they] have to sit and wait for a while because [they] will have to pick it [leaflet] up.” (FG5) |
| Discreet diagnostic services and face-to-face support | “The mobile, BreastCheck [national breast cancer screening service] unit…if they had something like that where it’s not in the middle of town…or in a pharmacy…somewhere that people don’t see you going in and out…that you maybe could go and get an x-ray just for that…because everybody is their own individual person and the majority of people like to keep their business to themselves…so they don’t want to run into people they know and have them gossip behind their back.” (FG1) “Have a one-to-one support person that’s willing, that has given up the fags [cigarettes]…there’s no point in having somebody that never put a fag into their mouth to support you because they don’t know what you’re going through. You need somebody there that’s after being smoking, after giving them up, went through the mill, knows what you’re going through and is able to help you out there and then, you know.” (FG2) |
| Potentially ineffective strategies | “But do you see, if there’s a packet of fags [cigarettes] sitting and you can see all that stuff or you’re seeing lungs or something, I’ll turn that packet over…I don’t see that anymore....you just don’t see it….you’re immune to it.” (FG1) “Putting it [message] on the back of a cigarette packet is too late. You’re already going to smoke, you know…there’s no point in showing me a picture of blackened lungs on a packet of cigarettes that I’m going to take one out of.” (FG3) |
| Views regarding pre-existing campaigns | “Be Clear on Cancer” (England): “Easy to read, easy to understand…has a good lot of awareness. It is the signs and symptoms and it gets you thinking. Do you have a recurring cough and it wasn’t going away?...it is straightforward.” (FG1) “You have scenarios…it [leaflet] raised my awareness of it [lung cancer]. If I picked that up now and that, if I saw them in the doctors…I’d be more drawn to this because of the…[personal stories].” (FG2) “Leaflet is cold and clinical…there’s nothing in that [leaflet] now that would make me look twice…been coughing for three weeks [message] is not applicable because [he has] been coughing for 55 years.” (FG3) “Leaflet is a bit heavy…not really inclined to read all that…nobody’s going to pick that [leaflet] up and read it.” (FG4) “[The slogan ‘Be Clear on Cancer’] is boring…and people wouldn’t be bothered reading it.” (FG5). “Get Checked Early” (Scotland): “If that [leaflet] came in my door, I would read it…I think it’s [leaflet] very good because personally, myself, I haven’t seen anything like this written down to say lung cancer doesn’t have to be game over…I always thought once you had cancer, you had cancer, especially lung cancer.” (FG1) “It [leaflet] has Alex Ferguson [celebrity] on it…especially for young lads because they look up to him…it might be too late for me, but for my sons, they’d look up to him big time.” (FG2) “I find [the slogan ‘Don’t Get Scared Get Checked’] comforting…it doesn’t give the impression you have lung cancer you’re going to die.” (FG3) “Giving a list of bullet points [favourable]: if you have two or more of these symptoms, get it checked out. It could be lung cancer.” (FG5) |