Stigma attached to lung cancer can have far reaching consequences
Main Category: Lung CancerArticle Date: 11 Jun 2004 - 4:00 PDT
'Stigma attached to lung cancer can have far reaching consequences'
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The stigma attached to patients with lung cancer can have serious consequences on people's lives, finds new research on bmj.com. Anti-smoking campaigns can often add to this stigma by reinforcing the view that patients are to blame for their disease.
Researchers in Oxford interviewed 45 patients with lung cancer for DIPEx (Personal Experiences of Health and Illness) http://www.dipex.org.
Whether they smoked or not, patients with lung cancer felt particularly stigmatised because the disease is so strongly associated with smoking and because some patients die in an unpleasant way.
Interaction with family, friends, and doctors was often affected as a result, and many patients, particularly those who had stopped smoking years ago or had never smoked, felt unjustly blamed for their illness. One said: "people automatically think you've brought it on yourself and it's a sort of stigma."
Some patients concealed their illness, which sometimes had serious consequences, such as deterring patients from seeking all the help they needed. Some criticised the media for adding to the stigma, while others maintained that the real culprits were tobacco companies with unscrupulous policies.
A few patients were worried that treatment and research into lung cancer might be adversely affected by the stigma attached to the disease and those who smoke.
Efforts to help people to quit smoking are important, say the authors, but there is a dilemma for anti-smoking campaigns and for clinicians who take seriously their responsibility to deter people from smoking and to encourage smokers to stop.
Those who produce images of "dirty lungs" rightly aim to put young people off tobacco, but such images can upset people with smoking related illness. In contrast, publicity about the Machiavellian role of the global tobacco industry may resonate with young people while avoiding further victim blaming of those with lung cancer and other smoking related diseases, they conclude.
Contact:
Alison Chapple, Senior Research Fellow, DIPEx Research Group, Department of Primary Health Care, University of Oxford, UK
Email: alison.chapple@dphpc.ox.ac.uk
(Stigma, shame, and blame experienced by patients with lung cancer: qualitative study)
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/reprint/bmj.38111.639734.7C
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/content/vol328/issue7453/press_release.shtml#2
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/9374.php.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)
The Fog of War
posted by Michael Riggs on 11 Jun 2004 at 5:01 amThis article attends to an important issue, and a major hazard of the Information Age. Smoking is not good, but campaigns against it depend on hyperbole of the "War on" x or y type.
Smokers are portrayed as near idiots on billboards, in magazines, and in all forms of media. Demonology is not good science, but in their zeal to right a social wrong, many scientists (myself included) have inadvertently contributed to stigma induced delays in treatment, and to the rise of another disease- a kind of health facism-intolerant, supercilious, and mean. Well done.
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