lunes, 1 de mayo de 2017

An exploratory study of patients' views about being at high-risk for breast cancer and risk management beliefs and intentions, before and after ris... - PubMed - NCBI

An exploratory study of patients' views about being at high-risk for breast cancer and risk management beliefs and intentions, before and after ris... - PubMed - NCBI



 2017 Mar;100(3):575-582. doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2016.10.005. Epub 2016 Oct 11.

An exploratory study of patients' views about being at high-risk for breast cancer and risk management beliefs and intentions, before and after risk counselling: Preliminary evidence of the influence of beliefs on post-counselling prevention intentions.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES:

1) To describe how women at high-risk for breast cancer (BC) perceive their at-risk status and the options available to manage this risk, before and after risk counselling; 2) to explore the contributions of pre-counselling demographic, clinical, cognitive and emotional factors to post-counselling risk management intentions.

METHODS:

58 of 173 eligible patients (34%) enrolled and were asked to fill surveys including measures of 1) subjective risk, 2) illness (being at high-risk for BC) and 3) treatment (surveillance, lifestyle modifications, and chemoprevention) cognitions, 4) BC fear and 5) future risk management intentions, prior to and 3 months after risk consultation.

RESULTS:

48 of 58 participants (83%) completed both surveys. Beliefs and emotions about their condition and its management were stable over time. Surveillance and lifestyle were associated with stronger intentions, higher perceived need, and lower concerns than chemoprevention (all ps <0.001). The strongest predictors of intentions strengths were the women's beliefs about the risk reduction methods, especially for lifestyle and chemoprevention (all ps <0.01).

CONCLUSIONS:

The findings emphasize the importance of patients' beliefs in risk management decisions.

PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS:

Patients' treatment beliefs appear to influence their choice of BC risk reduction strategies and should be discussed during risk reduction consultations.

KEYWORDS:

Breast cancer prevention; Chemoprevention; High risk for breast cancer; Illness perception; Treatment beliefs

PMID:
 
27756584
 
DOI:
 
10.1016/j.pec.2016.10.005

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