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Trajectories to a Cancer Diagnosis: Why and when Women Seek Help for Breast Symptoms in Vietnam

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Abstract

Women in low- and middle-income countries where the prevalence and mortality of breast cancer are growing rapidly are more likely to be diagnosed at advanced stages, which negatively affects their treatment outcomes and chance of survival. The current literature in those settings tends to focus largely on explaining patient delay in seeking medical attention for breast symptoms. Meanwhile, little is known as to what prompts women to attend screening and diagnostic services after discovering symptomatic breasts. Drawn upon the data from in-depth interviews with 33 breast cancer patients in Central Vietnam conducted in 2019, this paper examines the context of women's decisions about breast screening and how the practice of seeking cancer diagnosis occurred. Our findings reveal an absence of a national screening program and that seeking medical advice was conducted on an ad hoc basis after self-detection of breast symptoms. Women's interpretations of symptomatic breasts as suspicious signs of cancer, the co-occurrence of important life events, or encouragement by people in their social network motivated women to seek medical attention at different public and private health facilities. Their encounters with the health sector often involved multiple visits across time and space in which they experienced various forms of diagnosis delay produced by the health system. Our study carries implications for interventions to encourage women's awareness of early cancer symptoms and prompt medical presentation after self-discovery of symptomatic breasts.

Citing Articles

Trajectories to a cancer diagnosis: Why and when women seek help for breast symptoms in Vietnam.

Do T, Whittaker A Health Soc Care Community. 2022; 30(6):e6322-e6331.

PMID: 36245318 PMC: 10092510. DOI: 10.1111/hsc.14074.

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