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Understanding how Malaysian women appraise their breast cancer symptoms: A narrative approach

Understanding how Malaysian women appraise their breast cancer symptoms: A narrative approach
Understanding how Malaysian women appraise their breast cancer symptoms: A narrative approach
INTRODUCTION: Awareness of breast cancer symptoms has made a positive impact on recognition and screening, however there is little research describing how women interpret their bodily changes. This study was conducted to explore how Malaysian women with breast cancer appraise their symptoms and how their interpretation of the symptoms had been shaped by the social norms, knowledge and previous experiences.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: 14 women with breast cancer were recruited using purposeful sampling. The participants took part in in-depth, one-time, face-to-face, and audio-recorded interviews. All the interviews were subsequently transcribed verbatim and analysed using structure and content of a narrative approach.

RESULTS: Women interpreted their symptoms based on the physical presentation of the symptoms, previous experiences, and societal norms and beliefs. Some women immediately understood the potential meaning of their breast changes and sought medical opinion, while others waited from one week up to until one year to observe symptoms or normalised them in terms of previous and current experiences. The use of narrative enabled these women to recapitulate particular experiences that had special meaning in order to make sense of their action.

CONCLUSIONS: The way women interpreted their symptoms reflected their understanding on the significant meaning of the symptoms. Acknowledging this symptom appraisal information may assist healthcare professionals in providing appropriate information that can challenge misconceptions, myths, and negative beliefs about breast cancer to improve breast cancer awareness and early detection among the community.
Breast cancer, Malaysia, Narrative, Women
1823-4631
81-87
Wan Mamat, Wan Hasliza
711a117a-859b-41b7-8c9a-86440ada1d89
Lund, Susi
239a4d54-13e1-4d69-8e3f-08475c20af47
Jarrett, Nikki
acfc2414-c001-4fde-950d-b767fc7fa83d
Mohd Taib, Nur Aishah
b2e2f801-e1cd-4d94-a6aa-c18be26be3e9
Duke, Sue
fd62443f-dcce-4733-8141-eeda2d136864
Wan Mamat, Wan Hasliza
711a117a-859b-41b7-8c9a-86440ada1d89
Lund, Susi
239a4d54-13e1-4d69-8e3f-08475c20af47
Jarrett, Nikki
acfc2414-c001-4fde-950d-b767fc7fa83d
Mohd Taib, Nur Aishah
b2e2f801-e1cd-4d94-a6aa-c18be26be3e9
Duke, Sue
fd62443f-dcce-4733-8141-eeda2d136864

Wan Mamat, Wan Hasliza, Lund, Susi, Jarrett, Nikki, Mohd Taib, Nur Aishah and Duke, Sue (2022) Understanding how Malaysian women appraise their breast cancer symptoms: A narrative approach. IIUM Medical Journal Malaysia, 21 (2), 81-87. (doi:10.31436/imjm.v21i2.1712).

Record type: Article

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Awareness of breast cancer symptoms has made a positive impact on recognition and screening, however there is little research describing how women interpret their bodily changes. This study was conducted to explore how Malaysian women with breast cancer appraise their symptoms and how their interpretation of the symptoms had been shaped by the social norms, knowledge and previous experiences.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: 14 women with breast cancer were recruited using purposeful sampling. The participants took part in in-depth, one-time, face-to-face, and audio-recorded interviews. All the interviews were subsequently transcribed verbatim and analysed using structure and content of a narrative approach.

RESULTS: Women interpreted their symptoms based on the physical presentation of the symptoms, previous experiences, and societal norms and beliefs. Some women immediately understood the potential meaning of their breast changes and sought medical opinion, while others waited from one week up to until one year to observe symptoms or normalised them in terms of previous and current experiences. The use of narrative enabled these women to recapitulate particular experiences that had special meaning in order to make sense of their action.

CONCLUSIONS: The way women interpreted their symptoms reflected their understanding on the significant meaning of the symptoms. Acknowledging this symptom appraisal information may assist healthcare professionals in providing appropriate information that can challenge misconceptions, myths, and negative beliefs about breast cancer to improve breast cancer awareness and early detection among the community.

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Published date: 1 April 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: No conflict of interest has been declared by the authors. Acknowledgement We would like to express my gratitude to both of the hospitals, the nurses, my research participants and all who were involved in my data collection process in Malaysia. We’d also like to extend our gratitude. Thank you to the Ministry of Education Malaysia and, International Islamic University Malaysia and Kulliyyah of Nursing for funding my PhD study. Publisher Copyright: © 2022. IIUM Medical Journal Malaysia. All Rights Reserved. Copyright: Copyright 2022 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords: Breast cancer, Malaysia, Narrative, Women

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457097
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457097
ISSN: 1823-4631
PURE UUID: b34c687b-6bf1-40b6-9522-fbc4581c7c45

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Date deposited: 24 May 2022 16:33
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Wan Hasliza Wan Mamat
Author: Susi Lund
Author: Nikki Jarrett
Author: Nur Aishah Mohd Taib
Author: Sue Duke

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