The complexity of diagnosing sarcoma in a timely manner: Perspectives of health professionals, patients, and carers in Australia

Background: Prolonged diagnosis intervals occur more often in rare cancers, such as sarcoma. Patients with a delayed diagnosis may require more radical surgery and have a reduced chance of survival. Previous research has focused on quantifying the time taken to achieve a diagnosis without exploring...

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Main Authors: Weaver, Rhys, O'Connor, Moira, Carey Smith, R., Halkett, Georgia
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/86688
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author Weaver, Rhys
O'Connor, Moira
Carey Smith, R.
Halkett, Georgia
author_facet Weaver, Rhys
O'Connor, Moira
Carey Smith, R.
Halkett, Georgia
author_sort Weaver, Rhys
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: Prolonged diagnosis intervals occur more often in rare cancers, such as sarcoma. Patients with a delayed diagnosis may require more radical surgery and have a reduced chance of survival. Previous research has focused on quantifying the time taken to achieve a diagnosis without exploring the reasons for potential delays. The aim of this study was to explore patients', carers', and health professionals' perceived barriers to timely diagnosis and referral for treatment for sarcoma. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with: health professionals working with sarcoma (n = 21); patients who have been diagnosed with sarcoma (n = 22); and carers of patients diagnosed with sarcoma (n = 17). Interview transcripts were analysed using thematic analysis. Results: Four overarching themes were identified: patient perception of symptoms, difficulties of diagnosis, lack of experience, and availability of health services. Diagnosis was prolonged by the limited availability of health services, lack of prompt referrals to a sarcoma specialist centre, and diagnostic challenges. Intervals also occurred when patients underestimated the severity of their symptoms and did not seek prompt medical consultation. Conclusions: Patients with a potential sarcoma need to be promptly referred to a sarcoma specialist centre and additional diagnosis pathways need to be developed to reduce the rate of patients being referred to wrong specialists. Sarcoma education must be embedded in medical courses and professional development curricula. A public health approach should be taken to improve sarcoma knowledge and health seeking behaviours in the community.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-866882021-12-07T04:18:59Z The complexity of diagnosing sarcoma in a timely manner: Perspectives of health professionals, patients, and carers in Australia Weaver, Rhys O'Connor, Moira Carey Smith, R. Halkett, Georgia Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Health Care Sciences & Services Sarcoma Qualitative research Interviews Patients Carers Thematic analysis SOFT-TISSUE SARCOMAS YOUNG-ADULTS CANCER BONE SYMPTOMS DELAY INTERVIEWS Background: Prolonged diagnosis intervals occur more often in rare cancers, such as sarcoma. Patients with a delayed diagnosis may require more radical surgery and have a reduced chance of survival. Previous research has focused on quantifying the time taken to achieve a diagnosis without exploring the reasons for potential delays. The aim of this study was to explore patients', carers', and health professionals' perceived barriers to timely diagnosis and referral for treatment for sarcoma. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with: health professionals working with sarcoma (n = 21); patients who have been diagnosed with sarcoma (n = 22); and carers of patients diagnosed with sarcoma (n = 17). Interview transcripts were analysed using thematic analysis. Results: Four overarching themes were identified: patient perception of symptoms, difficulties of diagnosis, lack of experience, and availability of health services. Diagnosis was prolonged by the limited availability of health services, lack of prompt referrals to a sarcoma specialist centre, and diagnostic challenges. Intervals also occurred when patients underestimated the severity of their symptoms and did not seek prompt medical consultation. Conclusions: Patients with a potential sarcoma need to be promptly referred to a sarcoma specialist centre and additional diagnosis pathways need to be developed to reduce the rate of patients being referred to wrong specialists. Sarcoma education must be embedded in medical courses and professional development curricula. A public health approach should be taken to improve sarcoma knowledge and health seeking behaviours in the community. 2020 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/86688 10.1186/s12913-020-05532-8 English http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ BMC fulltext
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Health Care Sciences & Services
Sarcoma
Qualitative research
Interviews
Patients
Carers
Thematic analysis
SOFT-TISSUE SARCOMAS
YOUNG-ADULTS
CANCER
BONE
SYMPTOMS
DELAY
INTERVIEWS
Weaver, Rhys
O'Connor, Moira
Carey Smith, R.
Halkett, Georgia
The complexity of diagnosing sarcoma in a timely manner: Perspectives of health professionals, patients, and carers in Australia
title The complexity of diagnosing sarcoma in a timely manner: Perspectives of health professionals, patients, and carers in Australia
title_full The complexity of diagnosing sarcoma in a timely manner: Perspectives of health professionals, patients, and carers in Australia
title_fullStr The complexity of diagnosing sarcoma in a timely manner: Perspectives of health professionals, patients, and carers in Australia
title_full_unstemmed The complexity of diagnosing sarcoma in a timely manner: Perspectives of health professionals, patients, and carers in Australia
title_short The complexity of diagnosing sarcoma in a timely manner: Perspectives of health professionals, patients, and carers in Australia
title_sort complexity of diagnosing sarcoma in a timely manner: perspectives of health professionals, patients, and carers in australia
topic Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Health Care Sciences & Services
Sarcoma
Qualitative research
Interviews
Patients
Carers
Thematic analysis
SOFT-TISSUE SARCOMAS
YOUNG-ADULTS
CANCER
BONE
SYMPTOMS
DELAY
INTERVIEWS
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/86688