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Understanding the impact of distance and disadvantage on lung cancer care and outcomes: a study protocol

Understanding the impact of distance and disadvantage on lung cancer care and outcomes: a study protocol
Understanding the impact of distance and disadvantage on lung cancer care and outcomes: a study protocol
Background: lung cancer is the third most common cancer in the UK and the leading cause of cancer mortality globally. NHS England guidance for optimum lung cancer care recommends management and treatment by a specialist team, with experts concentrated in one place, providing access to specialised diagnostic and treatment facilities. However, the complex and rapidly evolving diagnostic and treatment pathways for lung cancer, together with workforce limitations, make achieving this challenging. This place-based, behavioural science-informed qualitative study aims to explore how person-related characteristics interact with a person's location relative to specialist services to impact their engagement with the optimal lung pathway, and to compare and contrast experiences in rural, coastal, and urban communities. This study also aims to generate translatable evidence to inform the evidence-based design of a patient engagement intervention to improve lung cancer patients' and informal carers' participation in and experience of the lung cancer care pathway.

Methods: a qualitative cross-sectional interview study with people diagnosed with lung cancer < 6 months before recruitment (in receipt of surgery, radical radiotherapy, or living with advanced disease) and their informal carers. Participants will be recruited purposively from Barts Health NHS Trust and United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trusts to ensure a diverse sample across urban and rural settings. Semi-structured interviews will explore factors affecting individuals' capability, opportunity, and motivation to engage with their recommended diagnostic and treatment pathway. A framework approach, informed by the COM-B model, will be used to thematically analyse facilitators and barriers to patient engagement.

Discussion: the study aligns with the current policy priority to ensure that people with cancer, no matter where they live, can access the best quality treatments and care. The evidence generated will be used to ensure that lung cancer services are developed to meet the needs of rural, coastal, and urban communities. The findings will inform the development of an intervention to support patient engagement with their recommended lung cancer pathway.
Qualitative research, COM-B model, Informal carer, Lung cancer, Patient experience, Urban health, Rural health, Oncology
1471-2407
McInnerney, Daisy
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Quaife, Samantha L.
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Cooke, Samuel
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Mitchinson, Lucy
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Pogson, Zara
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Ricketts, William
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Januszewski, Adam
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Lerner, Anna
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Skinner, Dawn
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Civello, Sarah
39142b87-7c2d-49a5-a7a6-ad9dfb4df6f2
Kane, Ros
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Harding-Bell, Ava
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Calman, Lynn
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Selby, Peter
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Peake, Michael D.
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Nelson, David
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McInnerney, Daisy
c233c416-c53d-4dfb-8790-468d136bb6f5
Quaife, Samantha L.
770242c4-341e-4c2c-a0c0-1d3e153507eb
Cooke, Samuel
599dffa8-8957-4a57-8cb5-21285f3c04af
Mitchinson, Lucy
aa0fe033-f273-4ca8-a474-67d482be6f44
Pogson, Zara
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Ricketts, William
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Januszewski, Adam
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Lerner, Anna
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Skinner, Dawn
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Civello, Sarah
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Kane, Ros
8796c4a1-a122-4a85-b62a-db52c3746314
Harding-Bell, Ava
e7d4ebc9-a606-414c-958d-964b60988a57
Calman, Lynn
9ae254eb-74a7-4906-9eb4-62ad99f058c1
Selby, Peter
ee0c4276-32fc-4a35-9772-40ae1f1cc76a
Peake, Michael D.
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Nelson, David
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McInnerney, Daisy, Quaife, Samantha L., Cooke, Samuel, Mitchinson, Lucy, Pogson, Zara, Ricketts, William, Januszewski, Adam, Lerner, Anna, Skinner, Dawn, Civello, Sarah, Kane, Ros, Harding-Bell, Ava, Calman, Lynn, Selby, Peter, Peake, Michael D. and Nelson, David (2025) Understanding the impact of distance and disadvantage on lung cancer care and outcomes: a study protocol. BMC cancer, 24 (1), [942]. (doi:10.1186/s12885-024-12705-9).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: lung cancer is the third most common cancer in the UK and the leading cause of cancer mortality globally. NHS England guidance for optimum lung cancer care recommends management and treatment by a specialist team, with experts concentrated in one place, providing access to specialised diagnostic and treatment facilities. However, the complex and rapidly evolving diagnostic and treatment pathways for lung cancer, together with workforce limitations, make achieving this challenging. This place-based, behavioural science-informed qualitative study aims to explore how person-related characteristics interact with a person's location relative to specialist services to impact their engagement with the optimal lung pathway, and to compare and contrast experiences in rural, coastal, and urban communities. This study also aims to generate translatable evidence to inform the evidence-based design of a patient engagement intervention to improve lung cancer patients' and informal carers' participation in and experience of the lung cancer care pathway.

Methods: a qualitative cross-sectional interview study with people diagnosed with lung cancer < 6 months before recruitment (in receipt of surgery, radical radiotherapy, or living with advanced disease) and their informal carers. Participants will be recruited purposively from Barts Health NHS Trust and United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trusts to ensure a diverse sample across urban and rural settings. Semi-structured interviews will explore factors affecting individuals' capability, opportunity, and motivation to engage with their recommended diagnostic and treatment pathway. A framework approach, informed by the COM-B model, will be used to thematically analyse facilitators and barriers to patient engagement.

Discussion: the study aligns with the current policy priority to ensure that people with cancer, no matter where they live, can access the best quality treatments and care. The evidence generated will be used to ensure that lung cancer services are developed to meet the needs of rural, coastal, and urban communities. The findings will inform the development of an intervention to support patient engagement with their recommended lung cancer pathway.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 2 August 2025
Published date: 2 August 2025
Keywords: Qualitative research, COM-B model, Informal carer, Lung cancer, Patient experience, Urban health, Rural health, Oncology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506745
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506745
ISSN: 1471-2407
PURE UUID: c6a398a2-14a8-4624-a2ee-ac9d080a128e
ORCID for Lynn Calman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9964-6017

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Date deposited: 17 Nov 2025 17:55
Last modified: 12 Dec 2025 02:43

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Contributors

Author: Daisy McInnerney
Author: Samantha L. Quaife
Author: Samuel Cooke
Author: Lucy Mitchinson
Author: Zara Pogson
Author: William Ricketts
Author: Adam Januszewski
Author: Anna Lerner
Author: Dawn Skinner
Author: Sarah Civello
Author: Ros Kane
Author: Ava Harding-Bell
Author: Lynn Calman ORCID iD
Author: Peter Selby
Author: Michael D. Peake
Author: David Nelson

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