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Improving cancer symptom awareness and help-seeking among adults living in socioeconomically deprived communities in the UK using a facilitated health check: A protocol for the Awareness and Beliefs About Cancer (ABACus) Randomised Control Trial

BACKGROUND: Cancer survival is lower in socioeconomically deprived communities, partly due to low awareness of symptoms, negative beliefs and delayed help-seeking. We developed an interactive health check questionnaire facilitated by trained lay advisors. It entails 29 questions about background, li...

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Autores principales: Moriarty, Yvonne, Townson, Julia, Quinn-Scoggins, Harriet, Padgett, Louise, Owen, Sioned, Smits, Stephanie, Playle, Rebecca, Dimitropoulou, Polyxeni, Sewell, Bernadette, Kolovou, Vasiliki, Buckle, Peter, Carter, Ben, Edwards, Adrian, Hepburn, Julie, Matthews, Maura, Mitchell, Caroline, Neal, Richard D, Robling, Michael, Wood, Fiona, Brain, Kate
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6417119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30866887
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-6612-9
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author Moriarty, Yvonne
Townson, Julia
Quinn-Scoggins, Harriet
Padgett, Louise
Owen, Sioned
Smits, Stephanie
Playle, Rebecca
Dimitropoulou, Polyxeni
Sewell, Bernadette
Kolovou, Vasiliki
Buckle, Peter
Carter, Ben
Edwards, Adrian
Hepburn, Julie
Matthews, Maura
Mitchell, Caroline
Neal, Richard D
Robling, Michael
Wood, Fiona
Brain, Kate
author_facet Moriarty, Yvonne
Townson, Julia
Quinn-Scoggins, Harriet
Padgett, Louise
Owen, Sioned
Smits, Stephanie
Playle, Rebecca
Dimitropoulou, Polyxeni
Sewell, Bernadette
Kolovou, Vasiliki
Buckle, Peter
Carter, Ben
Edwards, Adrian
Hepburn, Julie
Matthews, Maura
Mitchell, Caroline
Neal, Richard D
Robling, Michael
Wood, Fiona
Brain, Kate
author_sort Moriarty, Yvonne
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Cancer survival is lower in socioeconomically deprived communities, partly due to low awareness of symptoms, negative beliefs and delayed help-seeking. We developed an interactive health check questionnaire facilitated by trained lay advisors. It entails 29 questions about background, lifestyle and health with tailored behaviour change advice. Personalised results are printed using a traffic light (red/amber/green) system, highlighting areas where action should be taken. This is an individually randomised control trial to test effectiveness of the health check on symptom recognition. METHODS: A total 246 participants aged 40+ years will be recruited from community and healthcare settings in socioeconomically deprived areas of Yorkshire and South Wales. Participants will be randomised to receive the health check or standard care (1:1 ratio). Outcome measures include: adapted Awareness and Beliefs about Cancer (primary outcome), brief State Trait Anxiety Inventory, intentions and motivation to adopt recommended health behaviours (early symptom presentation, cancer screening and lifestyle behaviours), adapted Client Service Receipt Inventory, brief medical history/screening and demographic questionnaire at: baseline; 2-weeks; and 6-months post-randomisation. A purposive sample of intervention sessions will be audio-recorded (n = 24) and half will additionally be observed (n = 12). Semi-structured interviews will take place at 2-weeks (n = 30) and 6-months (n = 15–20) post-randomisation. The primary analysis will compare cancer symptom recognition scores between arms at 2-weeks. Secondary analysis will assess cancer beliefs, barriers/time to presentation, screening and lifestyle behaviours, anxiety and costs. A process evaluation will assess intervention fidelity, dose and contamination. The London-Surrey NHS Research Ethics Committee (Ref: 17/LO/1507) approved this trial. DISCUSSION: This is a trial of a theoretically underpinned complex intervention which has undergone phase 1 and 2 development work. The findings will evaluate evidence about the effect of the health check on symptom awareness. Although there are few exclusion criteria there are limitations regarding the population we are able to reach, who may have even higher risks of late diagnosis and poor cancer prognosis. However, the health check has the potential to improve cancer symptom awareness and encourage early help-seeking behaviour in deprived populations, thereby reducing inequalities in longer term cancer outcomes. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Retrospectively registered with ISRCTN (Ref:ISRCTN16872545) on 12.01.2018.
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spelling pubmed-64171192019-03-25 Improving cancer symptom awareness and help-seeking among adults living in socioeconomically deprived communities in the UK using a facilitated health check: A protocol for the Awareness and Beliefs About Cancer (ABACus) Randomised Control Trial Moriarty, Yvonne Townson, Julia Quinn-Scoggins, Harriet Padgett, Louise Owen, Sioned Smits, Stephanie Playle, Rebecca Dimitropoulou, Polyxeni Sewell, Bernadette Kolovou, Vasiliki Buckle, Peter Carter, Ben Edwards, Adrian Hepburn, Julie Matthews, Maura Mitchell, Caroline Neal, Richard D Robling, Michael Wood, Fiona Brain, Kate BMC Public Health Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Cancer survival is lower in socioeconomically deprived communities, partly due to low awareness of symptoms, negative beliefs and delayed help-seeking. We developed an interactive health check questionnaire facilitated by trained lay advisors. It entails 29 questions about background, lifestyle and health with tailored behaviour change advice. Personalised results are printed using a traffic light (red/amber/green) system, highlighting areas where action should be taken. This is an individually randomised control trial to test effectiveness of the health check on symptom recognition. METHODS: A total 246 participants aged 40+ years will be recruited from community and healthcare settings in socioeconomically deprived areas of Yorkshire and South Wales. Participants will be randomised to receive the health check or standard care (1:1 ratio). Outcome measures include: adapted Awareness and Beliefs about Cancer (primary outcome), brief State Trait Anxiety Inventory, intentions and motivation to adopt recommended health behaviours (early symptom presentation, cancer screening and lifestyle behaviours), adapted Client Service Receipt Inventory, brief medical history/screening and demographic questionnaire at: baseline; 2-weeks; and 6-months post-randomisation. A purposive sample of intervention sessions will be audio-recorded (n = 24) and half will additionally be observed (n = 12). Semi-structured interviews will take place at 2-weeks (n = 30) and 6-months (n = 15–20) post-randomisation. The primary analysis will compare cancer symptom recognition scores between arms at 2-weeks. Secondary analysis will assess cancer beliefs, barriers/time to presentation, screening and lifestyle behaviours, anxiety and costs. A process evaluation will assess intervention fidelity, dose and contamination. The London-Surrey NHS Research Ethics Committee (Ref: 17/LO/1507) approved this trial. DISCUSSION: This is a trial of a theoretically underpinned complex intervention which has undergone phase 1 and 2 development work. The findings will evaluate evidence about the effect of the health check on symptom awareness. Although there are few exclusion criteria there are limitations regarding the population we are able to reach, who may have even higher risks of late diagnosis and poor cancer prognosis. However, the health check has the potential to improve cancer symptom awareness and encourage early help-seeking behaviour in deprived populations, thereby reducing inequalities in longer term cancer outcomes. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Retrospectively registered with ISRCTN (Ref:ISRCTN16872545) on 12.01.2018. BioMed Central 2019-03-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6417119/ /pubmed/30866887 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-6612-9 Text en © The Author(s). 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Moriarty, Yvonne
Townson, Julia
Quinn-Scoggins, Harriet
Padgett, Louise
Owen, Sioned
Smits, Stephanie
Playle, Rebecca
Dimitropoulou, Polyxeni
Sewell, Bernadette
Kolovou, Vasiliki
Buckle, Peter
Carter, Ben
Edwards, Adrian
Hepburn, Julie
Matthews, Maura
Mitchell, Caroline
Neal, Richard D
Robling, Michael
Wood, Fiona
Brain, Kate
Improving cancer symptom awareness and help-seeking among adults living in socioeconomically deprived communities in the UK using a facilitated health check: A protocol for the Awareness and Beliefs About Cancer (ABACus) Randomised Control Trial
title Improving cancer symptom awareness and help-seeking among adults living in socioeconomically deprived communities in the UK using a facilitated health check: A protocol for the Awareness and Beliefs About Cancer (ABACus) Randomised Control Trial
title_full Improving cancer symptom awareness and help-seeking among adults living in socioeconomically deprived communities in the UK using a facilitated health check: A protocol for the Awareness and Beliefs About Cancer (ABACus) Randomised Control Trial
title_fullStr Improving cancer symptom awareness and help-seeking among adults living in socioeconomically deprived communities in the UK using a facilitated health check: A protocol for the Awareness and Beliefs About Cancer (ABACus) Randomised Control Trial
title_full_unstemmed Improving cancer symptom awareness and help-seeking among adults living in socioeconomically deprived communities in the UK using a facilitated health check: A protocol for the Awareness and Beliefs About Cancer (ABACus) Randomised Control Trial
title_short Improving cancer symptom awareness and help-seeking among adults living in socioeconomically deprived communities in the UK using a facilitated health check: A protocol for the Awareness and Beliefs About Cancer (ABACus) Randomised Control Trial
title_sort improving cancer symptom awareness and help-seeking among adults living in socioeconomically deprived communities in the uk using a facilitated health check: a protocol for the awareness and beliefs about cancer (abacus) randomised control trial
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6417119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30866887
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-6612-9
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