Persuasion, adaptation, and double identity: Qualitative study on the psychological impact of a screen-detected colorectal cancer diagnosis

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Abstract

The NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme (BCSP) is aimed at reducing colorectal cancer (CRC) mortality through early detection within a healthy population. This study explores how 5 people (three females) experience and make sense of their screen-detected diagnosis and the psychological implications of this diagnostic pathway. A biographical narrative interview method was used, and transcripts were analysed using a thematic analysis with a phenomenological lens. Themes specifically relating to posttreatment experience and reflections are reported here: Do it: being living proof, Resisting the threat of recurrence, Rationalising bodily change, and Continuing life'“carrying on normally.” Participants described their gratefulness to the BCSP, motivating a strong desire to persuade others to be screened. Furthermore, participants professed a duality of experience categorised by the normalisation of life after diagnosis and treatment and an identification of strength post cancer, as well as a difficulty adjusting to the new changes in life and a contrasting identity of frailty. Understanding both the long- and short-term impacts of a CRC diagnosis through screening is instrumental to the optimisation of support for patients. The results perhaps highlight a particular target for psychological distress reduction, which could reduce the direct and indirect cost of cancer to the patient.

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APA

McGregor, L. M., Tookey, S., Raine, R., Von Wagner, C., & Black, G. (2018). Persuasion, adaptation, and double identity: Qualitative study on the psychological impact of a screen-detected colorectal cancer diagnosis. In Gastroenterology Research and Practice (Vol. 2018). Hindawi Limited. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/1275329

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