Diagnosing cancer in the bush: a mixed-methods study of symptom appraisal and help-seeking behaviour in people with cancer from rural Western Australia
Open Access
- 30 January 2013
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Family Practice
- Vol. 30 (3) , 294-301
- https://doi.org/10.1093/fampra/cms087
Abstract
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. To compare and explore symptom appraisal and help-seeking behaviour in patients with breast, lung, prostate or colorectal cancer from rural Western Australia (WA). 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. 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. 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.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Distance to the closest radiotherapy facility and survival after a diagnosis of rectal cancer in QueenslandThe Medical Journal of Australia, 2011
- Geographic remoteness and risk of advanced colorectal cancer at diagnosis in Queensland: a multilevel studyBritish Journal of Cancer, 2011
- Time to diagnosis and mortality in colorectal cancer: a cohort study in primary careBritish Journal of Cancer, 2011
- Lung cancer: An exploration of patient and general practitioner perspectives on the realities of care in rural Western AustraliaAustralian Journal of Rural Health, 2008
- Inequity in rural cancer survival in Australia is not an insurmountable problemThe Medical Journal of Australia, 2006
- Rural–urban differences in the presentation, management and survival of breast cancer in Western AustraliaThe Breast, 2006
- Delays in the diagnosis of six cancers: analysis of data from the National Survey of NHS Patients: CancerBritish Journal of Cancer, 2005
- Rural inequalities in cancer care and outcomeThe Medical Journal of Australia, 2005
- Prostate cancer: socio‐economic, geographical and private‐health insurance effects on care and survivalBJU International, 2004
- Influence of delay on survival in patients with breast cancer: a systematic reviewThe Lancet, 1999