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Perceived barriers to early presentation and symptom-specific time to seek medical advice for possible colorectal cancer symptoms among Palestinians

Authors :
Mohamedraed Elshami
Mohammed Ayyad
Fatma Khader Hamdan
Mohammed Alser
Ibrahim Al-Slaibi
Shoruq Ahmed Naji
Balqees Mustafa Mohamad
Wejdan Sudki Isleem
Adela Shurrab
Bashar Yaghi
Yahya Ayyash Qabaja
Mohammad Fuad Dwikat
Raneen Raed Sweity
Remah Tayseer Jneed
Khayria Ali Assaf
Maram Elena Albandak
Mohammed Madhat Hmaid
Iyas Imad Awwad
Belal Khalil Alhabil
Marah Naser Alarda
Amani Saleh Alsattari
Moumen Sameer Aboyousef
Omar Abdallah Aljbour
Rinad AlSharif
Christy Teddy Giacaman
Ali Younis Alnaga
Ranin Mufid Abu Nemer
Nada Mahmoud Almadhoun
Sondos Mahmoud Skaik
Nasser Abu-El-Noor
Bettina Bottcher
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 13, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract This study explored the anticipated time to seek medical advice for possible colorectal cancer (CRC) signs/symptoms and its association with CRC symptom awareness. In addition, it examined perceived barriers that may delay seeking medical advice. Palestinian adults were recruited from hospitals, primary healthcare centers, and public spaces in 11 governorates. A modified, translated-into-Arabic version of the validated Bowel Cancer Awareness Measure was used. The questionnaire comprised three sections: sociodemographics, assessment of CRC symptom awareness and time to seek medical advice, and barriers to early presentation. A total of 4623 participants were included. The proportion that reported seeking immediate medical advice for possible CRC signs/symptoms with blood or mass ranged from 47.1% for ‘blood in stools’ to 59.5% for ‘bleeding from back passage’. Less than half of the participants reported immediate seeking of medical advice for non-specific symptoms (ranging from 5.4% for ‘loss of appetite’ to 42.0% for ‘anemia’) and other gastrointestinal symptoms (ranging from 7.7% for ‘feeling persistently full’ to 35.7% for ‘change in bowel habits’). Good CRC symptom awareness was associated with higher likelihood of seeking medical advice within a week from recognizing a CRC symptom. About 13.0% reported a delay to visit their doctor after recognizing a CRC symptom. The most reported barriers were practical with ‘would try some herbs first’ (50.9%) as the leading barrier. CRC symptoms with blood or mass prompted earlier help seeking. Participants with good CRC awareness were more likely to seek medical advice within a week.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.22327cb81c0b4877952b5abb383bdd98
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-34136-5