Predicting attendance of post treatment cancer care patients in general practice: the role of concomitant health conditions in the theory of planned behaviour

Background: Due to the increasing numbers of patients at hospital cancer clinics, it is likely that specialist care of patients with colorectal cancer will need to be re-organised. More patients, who have been treated successfully, may need long-term support in primary care. Despite rigorous researc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ngune, Irene, Jiwa, Moyez, McManus, Alexandra, Hughes, Jeff, Parsons, Richard, Hodder, R.
Format: Conference Paper
Published: WILEY-BLACKWELL 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33775
_version_ 1848754040600526848
author Ngune, Irene
Jiwa, Moyez
McManus, Alexandra
Hughes, Jeff
Parsons, Richard
Hodder, R.
author_facet Ngune, Irene
Jiwa, Moyez
McManus, Alexandra
Hughes, Jeff
Parsons, Richard
Hodder, R.
author_sort Ngune, Irene
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: Due to the increasing numbers of patients at hospital cancer clinics, it is likely that specialist care of patients with colorectal cancer will need to be re-organised. More patients, who have been treated successfully, may need long-term support in primary care. Despite rigorous research work done in this field, uptake of this approach is rather slow. Issues that affect endorsement of this approach have not been fully determined and, in particular patient factors that may affect uptake of this programme have not been explored. Aim: To examine the role of comorbidities in the theory of planned behaviour (TPB) in influencing patients’ intention to attend follow-up visits with a general practitioner (GP). Methods: A self-administered questionnaire was developed based on the TPB to assess colorectal cancer (CRC) patients’ intention to attend follow-up visits with a GP. Results: Sixty-six patients participated in the study. All factors (attitude, subjective norms, and perceived behaviour control (PBC)) accounted for 43.3% of the variance on future follow-up visits. Attitude explained 23.3% of the variance, but PBC and subjective norms did not account for any significant variance (on future intention to attend a follow-up visit). Univariate analysis suggested that attitude and the presence of a coexisting chronic illness significantly affected future intention to visit a GP (attitude: R2 = 0.233, F [1, 65] = 4.345, p < 0.01; comorbidity: R2 = 0.128, F [1, 65] = 3.019, p < 0.05). Conclusions: Patients who believe their GP has the skills and knowledge to detect a recurrence and patients with other comorbidities are more likely to visit their GP following treatment.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:34:05Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-33775
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:34:05Z
publishDate 2014
publisher WILEY-BLACKWELL
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-337752018-12-14T00:57:19Z Predicting attendance of post treatment cancer care patients in general practice: the role of concomitant health conditions in the theory of planned behaviour Ngune, Irene Jiwa, Moyez McManus, Alexandra Hughes, Jeff Parsons, Richard Hodder, R. Background: Due to the increasing numbers of patients at hospital cancer clinics, it is likely that specialist care of patients with colorectal cancer will need to be re-organised. More patients, who have been treated successfully, may need long-term support in primary care. Despite rigorous research work done in this field, uptake of this approach is rather slow. Issues that affect endorsement of this approach have not been fully determined and, in particular patient factors that may affect uptake of this programme have not been explored. Aim: To examine the role of comorbidities in the theory of planned behaviour (TPB) in influencing patients’ intention to attend follow-up visits with a general practitioner (GP). Methods: A self-administered questionnaire was developed based on the TPB to assess colorectal cancer (CRC) patients’ intention to attend follow-up visits with a GP. Results: Sixty-six patients participated in the study. All factors (attitude, subjective norms, and perceived behaviour control (PBC)) accounted for 43.3% of the variance on future follow-up visits. Attitude explained 23.3% of the variance, but PBC and subjective norms did not account for any significant variance (on future intention to attend a follow-up visit). Univariate analysis suggested that attitude and the presence of a coexisting chronic illness significantly affected future intention to visit a GP (attitude: R2 = 0.233, F [1, 65] = 4.345, p < 0.01; comorbidity: R2 = 0.128, F [1, 65] = 3.019, p < 0.05). Conclusions: Patients who believe their GP has the skills and knowledge to detect a recurrence and patients with other comorbidities are more likely to visit their GP following treatment. 2014 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33775 WILEY-BLACKWELL restricted
spellingShingle Ngune, Irene
Jiwa, Moyez
McManus, Alexandra
Hughes, Jeff
Parsons, Richard
Hodder, R.
Predicting attendance of post treatment cancer care patients in general practice: the role of concomitant health conditions in the theory of planned behaviour
title Predicting attendance of post treatment cancer care patients in general practice: the role of concomitant health conditions in the theory of planned behaviour
title_full Predicting attendance of post treatment cancer care patients in general practice: the role of concomitant health conditions in the theory of planned behaviour
title_fullStr Predicting attendance of post treatment cancer care patients in general practice: the role of concomitant health conditions in the theory of planned behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Predicting attendance of post treatment cancer care patients in general practice: the role of concomitant health conditions in the theory of planned behaviour
title_short Predicting attendance of post treatment cancer care patients in general practice: the role of concomitant health conditions in the theory of planned behaviour
title_sort predicting attendance of post treatment cancer care patients in general practice: the role of concomitant health conditions in the theory of planned behaviour
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33775