The role of social context in symptom appraisal and help ‐seeking among people with lung or colorectal symptoms: A qualitative interview study

This study sought to understand how the broader context of people's lives influenced symptom appraisal and help‐seeking, comparing experiences by length of the patient interval. Patients referred with a suspicion of lung or colorectal cancer were invited to complete a questionnaire about their symptoms, with 26 respondents purposively sampled to take part in a semi‐structured interview about their patient intervals. Embodied experience, appraisal, help‐seeking decision‐making and consultation were identified as component stages of the patient interval, with the factors affecting movement between these stages located in one of four contextual domains: individual experience, interpersonal relationships, healthcare system interactions and social and temporal context. The length of the patient interval was related to the type of symptom(s) experienced, discussion of symptoms with others and the social responsibilities people held during symptomatic periods. A contextual model of the patient interval illustrates the stages and domains of this interval, as grounded in the data from this study. The model has potential application to future studies examining the patient interval for a range of symptoms.
Source: European Journal of Cancer Care - Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Tags: ORIGINAL ARTICLE Source Type: research