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Perceptions and experiences of prostate cancer patients in a public tertiary hospital in urban South Africa

Perceptions and experiences of prostate cancer patients in a public tertiary hospital in urban South Africa
Perceptions and experiences of prostate cancer patients in a public tertiary hospital in urban South Africa
Prostate cancer is among the most prevalent forms of cancer worldwide and is reported to have the highest incidence, mortality, and 5-year prevalence rate of all cancers among men living in Africa. Despite this widespread burden in the African continent, little is known about the perspectives and experience of prostate cancer among African men. To further understand experiences among patients living in urban South Africa, we conducted in-depth, semi-structured qualitative interviews to examine the perceptions and experiences of 28 Black African prostate cancer patients receiving treatment at a major tertiary hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa. Our data explored four major areas of patients’ experiences with prostate cancer: detection, diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up care. Our results showed that the experience of living with prostate cancer among low-income, Black South African men is a stressful and emotionally painful experience due in part to men feeling that they had insufficient knowledge about their own condition and feeling disempowered or ill-equipped to manage their cancer. These feelings were strongly associated with distrust or dissatisfaction with physicians and the health care system. Resilience factors include social support from family, friends, and religious communities, acceptance of their diagnosis, religion, and positive appraisals of their medical care.
Prostate cancer, barriers to care, perceptions, psychosocial stress, men, distrust, social support, qualitative research, South Africa
1355-7858
696-711
Kim, Andrew Wooyoung
baef02e6-b25d-42a5-89e6-1907d35aad0a
Lambert, Madeleine
769ef6b6-7363-41ca-8dc6-7a6ee535c3fc
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Mendenhall, Emily
04022883-7dc9-4d5f-b288-e937cf07283f
Kim, Andrew Wooyoung
baef02e6-b25d-42a5-89e6-1907d35aad0a
Lambert, Madeleine
769ef6b6-7363-41ca-8dc6-7a6ee535c3fc
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Mendenhall, Emily
04022883-7dc9-4d5f-b288-e937cf07283f

Kim, Andrew Wooyoung, Lambert, Madeleine, Norris, Shane A. and Mendenhall, Emily (2023) Perceptions and experiences of prostate cancer patients in a public tertiary hospital in urban South Africa. Ethnicity and Health, 28 (5), 696-711. (doi:10.1080/13557858.2023.2174253).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Prostate cancer is among the most prevalent forms of cancer worldwide and is reported to have the highest incidence, mortality, and 5-year prevalence rate of all cancers among men living in Africa. Despite this widespread burden in the African continent, little is known about the perspectives and experience of prostate cancer among African men. To further understand experiences among patients living in urban South Africa, we conducted in-depth, semi-structured qualitative interviews to examine the perceptions and experiences of 28 Black African prostate cancer patients receiving treatment at a major tertiary hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa. Our data explored four major areas of patients’ experiences with prostate cancer: detection, diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up care. Our results showed that the experience of living with prostate cancer among low-income, Black South African men is a stressful and emotionally painful experience due in part to men feeling that they had insufficient knowledge about their own condition and feeling disempowered or ill-equipped to manage their cancer. These feelings were strongly associated with distrust or dissatisfaction with physicians and the health care system. Resilience factors include social support from family, friends, and religious communities, acceptance of their diagnosis, religion, and positive appraisals of their medical care.

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More information

Submitted date: 22 September 2021
Accepted/In Press date: 23 January 2023
Published date: 6 February 2023
Keywords: Prostate cancer, barriers to care, perceptions, psychosocial stress, men, distrust, social support, qualitative research, South Africa

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505729
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505729
ISSN: 1355-7858
PURE UUID: a6ea83a6-c022-4f96-a707-b246e916264b
ORCID for Shane A. Norris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7124-3788

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Date deposited: 16 Oct 2025 17:40
Last modified: 17 Oct 2025 02:05

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Contributors

Author: Andrew Wooyoung Kim
Author: Madeleine Lambert
Author: Shane A. Norris ORCID iD
Author: Emily Mendenhall

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