Challenges to Educating Smokers About Lung Cancer Screening: a Qualitative Study of Decision Making Experiences in Primary Care

We sought to qualitatively explore how those at highest risk for lung cancer, current smokers, experienced, understood, and made decisions about participation in lung cancer screening (LCS) after being offered in the target setting for implementation, routine primary care visits. Thirty-seven curren...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cancer education 2019-12, Vol.34 (6), p.1142-1149
Hauptverfasser: Greene, Preston A., Sayre, George, Heffner, Jaimee L., Klein, Deborah E., Krebs, Paul, Au, David H., Zeliadt, Steven B.
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container_end_page 1149
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1142
container_title Journal of cancer education
container_volume 34
creator Greene, Preston A.
Sayre, George
Heffner, Jaimee L.
Klein, Deborah E.
Krebs, Paul
Au, David H.
Zeliadt, Steven B.
description We sought to qualitatively explore how those at highest risk for lung cancer, current smokers, experienced, understood, and made decisions about participation in lung cancer screening (LCS) after being offered in the target setting for implementation, routine primary care visits. Thirty-seven current smokers were identified within 4 weeks of being offered LCS at seven sites participating in the Veterans Health Administration Clinical Demonstration Project and interviewed via telephone using semi-structured qualitative interviews. Transcripts were coded by two raters and analyzed thematically using iterative inductive content analysis. Five challenges to smokers’ decision-making lead to overestimated benefits and minimized risks of LCS: fear of lung cancer fixated focus on inflated screening benefits; shame, regret, and low self-esteem stemming from continued smoking situated screening as less averse and more beneficial; screening was mistakenly believed to provide general evaluation of lungs and reassurance was sought about potential damage caused by smoking; decision-making was deferred to providers; and indifference about numerical educational information that was poorly understood. Biased understanding of risks and benefits was complicated by emotion-driven, uninformed decision-making. Emotional and cognitive biases may interfere with educating and supporting smokers’ decision-making and may require interventions tailored for their unique needs.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s13187-018-1420-y
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subjects Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biomedicine
Cancer
Cancer Research
Clinical decision making
Content analysis
Decision making
Demonstration Programs
Lung cancer
Medical screening
Pharmacology/Toxicology
Primary care
Qualitative research
title Challenges to Educating Smokers About Lung Cancer Screening: a Qualitative Study of Decision Making Experiences in Primary Care
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