Login / Signup

A qualitative study of healthcare-related experiences of non-smoking women with lung cancer.

Dyda DaoJennifer M O'ConnorAminah JatoiJennifer RidgewayErin DeeringAnna SchweckeCarmen Radecki BreitkopfOlivia HustonJennifer G Le-Rademacher
Published in: Supportive care in cancer : official journal of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer (2019)
Twenty-three patients were interviewed, and three themes emerged. The first theme centered on a delay in cancer diagnosis. One patient described, "The whole initial diagnostic process just fills me with rage… I didn't actually get my Tarceva® until the last week in April." Second, the diagnosis of lung cancer seemed especially challenging in view of patients' non-smoking history and otherwise good health; these factors seem to have contributed to the diagnostic delay. One patient explained, "Well, I was just so adamant that I didn't like smoking… maybe if I had been a smoker, they [the healthcare providers] would've been more resourceful." Finally, the stigma of a smoking-induced malignancy was clearly articulated, "Yeah. Because it's a stigma, and I had read that, too -- people go, 'Well, it's your own damn fault because you were a smoker.'" CONCLUSIONS: Non-smoking women with lung cancer appear to endure a long trajectory from symptoms to cancer diagnosis to the initiation of cancer therapy. An awareness and acknowledgement of this long trajectory might help healthcare providers render more compassionate cancer care to these patients.
Keyphrases