2018
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.14615
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“But this is a good cancer:” Patient perceptions of endometrial cancer in Denmark

Abstract: In providing women with endometrial cancer with optimal support through diagnosis and treatment, clinicians should attend to the complexity of patients' illness understandings and be aware that assuring patients of a good prognosis not always has the expected impact.

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The first experience of HRQL after surgery can vary depending on several factors, including the type of surgery performed, the individual's overall health, the purpose of the surgery, and the expectations of the patient [18][19][20]. In particular, in women affected by endometrial cancer, the perception of disease is of utmost importance; since often surgery is by itself the most relevant treatment act, after hysterectomy, a feeling of good prognosis is very common [21,22]. In this setting, the impact of surgical treatment is paradigmatic given that these women are typically elderly with co-morbidities, and the maintenance of good HRQL should be integrated into the postoperative recovery [23].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first experience of HRQL after surgery can vary depending on several factors, including the type of surgery performed, the individual's overall health, the purpose of the surgery, and the expectations of the patient [18][19][20]. In particular, in women affected by endometrial cancer, the perception of disease is of utmost importance; since often surgery is by itself the most relevant treatment act, after hysterectomy, a feeling of good prognosis is very common [21,22]. In this setting, the impact of surgical treatment is paradigmatic given that these women are typically elderly with co-morbidities, and the maintenance of good HRQL should be integrated into the postoperative recovery [23].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Much like Kazimierczak and Skea (), we argue that notions of curable/incurable, trivial and gentle/invasive and brutal, and aggressive/non‐aggressive help constitute a categorisation of endometrial cancer as good (Sidenius et al . ); causing women to judge certain experiences as abnormal and ‘consider their own experiences as less serious (Bell , p. 61)’.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As diabetes prevalence globally continues to rise, the need for more tailored approaches to diagnostics becomes apparent (Sidenius et al. 2019; Wallin and Ahlström 2010), particularly among Native Americans, Alaska Natives, and Indigenous Peoples (Hartmann et al. 2019).…”
Section: From Cultural Competency To Decolonizing Health Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…How, then, might decolonization of diagnosis bring these other factors to the forefront, and how might it alter the response of diabetes patients? As diabetes prevalence globally continues to rise, the need for more tailored approaches to diagnostics becomes apparent (Sidenius et al 2019;Wallin and Ahlström 2010), particularly among Native Americans, Alaska Natives, and Indigenous Peoples (Hartmann et al 2019). Our research explored the person-specific social and cultural histories of Native American patients as they spoke about a new diabetes-related diagnosis.…”
Section: From Cultural Competency To Decolonizing Health Carementioning
confidence: 99%