A qualitative study exploring health perceptions and factors influencing participation in health behaviors in colorectal cancer survivors

Purpose: The purpose of the study was to explore colorectal cancer survivors' health perceptions following cessation of active treatment for cancer and to explore the factors influencing participation in health-promoting behaviors that may help reduce cardiovascular disease risk. Methods: Face-...

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Main Authors: Hardcastle, Sarah, Maxwell-Smith, Choe, Zeps, N., Platell, C., O'Connor, Moira, Hagger, Martin
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley InterScience 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21931
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author Hardcastle, Sarah
Maxwell-Smith, Choe
Zeps, N.
Platell, C.
O'Connor, Moira
Hagger, Martin
author_facet Hardcastle, Sarah
Maxwell-Smith, Choe
Zeps, N.
Platell, C.
O'Connor, Moira
Hagger, Martin
author_sort Hardcastle, Sarah
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Purpose: The purpose of the study was to explore colorectal cancer survivors' health perceptions following cessation of active treatment for cancer and to explore the factors influencing participation in health-promoting behaviors that may help reduce cardiovascular disease risk. Methods: Face-to-face interviews were conducted with participants that had completed active treatment for cancer within the previous 2 years. Participants were colorectal cancer survivors (N=24, men=11, women=13, M age=69.38 years, SD=4.19) recruited from a private hospital in Perth, Australia on the basis that they had existing morbidities that put them at increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Interview transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis. Results: Five main themes emerged: back to normal; the pleasures in life: 'is it worth it?'; beliefs about health behavior; skepticism of eating guidelines; and lack of motivation. The majority of participants felt they were in good health and had made a full recovery. Participants questioned whether it was worth changing their lifestyle given their life stage and referred to the desire to enjoy life. Lay health beliefs, skepticism of eating guidelines, and a lack of motivation were barriers to change. Conclusions: Interventions should target lay beliefs and skepticism in relation to health behaviors in order to reinforce the importance and value of participating in health-related behavior. Implications for Cancer Survivors: Findings may inform the development of effective, patient-centered interventions that target lay health beliefs and build motivation for health behavior change.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-219312017-09-13T15:35:12Z A qualitative study exploring health perceptions and factors influencing participation in health behaviors in colorectal cancer survivors Hardcastle, Sarah Maxwell-Smith, Choe Zeps, N. Platell, C. O'Connor, Moira Hagger, Martin Purpose: The purpose of the study was to explore colorectal cancer survivors' health perceptions following cessation of active treatment for cancer and to explore the factors influencing participation in health-promoting behaviors that may help reduce cardiovascular disease risk. Methods: Face-to-face interviews were conducted with participants that had completed active treatment for cancer within the previous 2 years. Participants were colorectal cancer survivors (N=24, men=11, women=13, M age=69.38 years, SD=4.19) recruited from a private hospital in Perth, Australia on the basis that they had existing morbidities that put them at increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Interview transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis. Results: Five main themes emerged: back to normal; the pleasures in life: 'is it worth it?'; beliefs about health behavior; skepticism of eating guidelines; and lack of motivation. The majority of participants felt they were in good health and had made a full recovery. Participants questioned whether it was worth changing their lifestyle given their life stage and referred to the desire to enjoy life. Lay health beliefs, skepticism of eating guidelines, and a lack of motivation were barriers to change. Conclusions: Interventions should target lay beliefs and skepticism in relation to health behaviors in order to reinforce the importance and value of participating in health-related behavior. Implications for Cancer Survivors: Findings may inform the development of effective, patient-centered interventions that target lay health beliefs and build motivation for health behavior change. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21931 10.1002/pon.4111 Wiley InterScience fulltext
spellingShingle Hardcastle, Sarah
Maxwell-Smith, Choe
Zeps, N.
Platell, C.
O'Connor, Moira
Hagger, Martin
A qualitative study exploring health perceptions and factors influencing participation in health behaviors in colorectal cancer survivors
title A qualitative study exploring health perceptions and factors influencing participation in health behaviors in colorectal cancer survivors
title_full A qualitative study exploring health perceptions and factors influencing participation in health behaviors in colorectal cancer survivors
title_fullStr A qualitative study exploring health perceptions and factors influencing participation in health behaviors in colorectal cancer survivors
title_full_unstemmed A qualitative study exploring health perceptions and factors influencing participation in health behaviors in colorectal cancer survivors
title_short A qualitative study exploring health perceptions and factors influencing participation in health behaviors in colorectal cancer survivors
title_sort qualitative study exploring health perceptions and factors influencing participation in health behaviors in colorectal cancer survivors
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21931