A Survey Of Lung Cancer In Rural And Remote Aboriginal And Torres Strait Islander Communities In Queensland: Health Views That Impact On Early Diagnosis And Treatment

INTERNAL MEDICINE JOURNAL(2016)

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摘要
BackgroundLung cancer incidence, mortality and hospitalisation rates are higher for Indigenous Australians compared with non-Indigenous Australians and increase again when living in more remote areas. If Indigenous Australians are made more aware of lung cancer through better access to health services and programmes, lung cancer outcomes might improve.AimWe aimed to survey the level of lung cancer awareness in rural and remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and discover perceived barriers to timely diagnosis and treatment of lung cancer.MethodsInterviews were conducted in three discrete outer regional and remote Aboriginal communities and one urban setting in Queensland. Participants included Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples from three target population groups: patients referred for medical treatment with symptoms suspicious of lung cancer or confirmed lung cancer; Indigenous health workers; community members aged 18 years and over. Participants gave written, informed consent.ResultsOf 51 community members and 14 Indigenous health workers, 32 reflected they knew very little about lung cancer, 60 cited smoking as the cause of lung cancer and 54 recognised warning symptoms as a prompt to seek healthcare. Indigenous health workers were not able to describe a healthcare pathway that would apply to a patient with suspected lung cancer.ConclusionThe two main barriers identified as impacting on quality healthcare were communication and follow-up processes. These could be addressed by service improvement activities.
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关键词
lung cancer, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health, health information, health services, culture
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