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Educational differences in likelihood of attributing breast symptoms to cancer: a vignette-based study

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Marcu, A 
Lyratzopoulos, Georgios  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2873-7421
Black, G 
Vedsted, P 
Whitaker, KL 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Stage at diagnosis of breast cancer varies by socio-economic status (SES), with lower SES associated with poorer survival. We investigated associations between SES (indexed by education), and the likelihood of attributing breast symptoms to breast cancer. METHOD: We conducted an online survey with 961 women (47-92 years) with variable educational levels. Two vignettes depicted familiar and unfamiliar breast changes (axillary lump and nipple rash). Without making breast cancer explicit, women were asked 'What do you think this […..] could be?' After the attribution question, women were asked to indicate their level of agreement with a cancer avoidance statement ('I would not want to know if I have breast cancer'). RESULTS: Women were more likely to mention cancer as a possible cause of an axillary lump (64%) compared with nipple rash (30%). In multivariable analysis, low and mid education were independently associated with being less likely to attribute a nipple rash to cancer (OR 0.51, 0.36-0.73 and OR 0.55, 0.40-0.77, respectively). For axillary lump, low education was associated with lower likelihood of mentioning cancer as a possible cause (OR 0.58, 0.41-0.83). Although cancer avoidance was also associated with lower education, the association between education and lower likelihood of making a cancer attribution was independent. CONCLUSION: Lower education was associated with lower likelihood of making cancer attributions for both symptoms, also after adjustment for cancer avoidance. Lower likelihood of considering cancer may delay symptomatic presentation and contribute to educational differences in stage at diagnosis.

Description

Keywords

Cancer, Early diagnosis, Education, Inequalities, Oncology, Symptom attribution

Journal Title

Psycho-Oncology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1057-9249
1099-1611

Volume Title

25

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell
Sponsorship
This study was funded by Cancer Research UK Early Diagnosis Advisory Group grant (C33872/A18555). GL is supported by a Cancer Research UK Advanced Clinician Scientist Fellowship (A18180).