Abstract
Individuals living with low income are more likely to smoke, have a higher risk of lung cancer, and are less likely to participate in preventative healthcare (i.e., low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) for lung cancer screening), leading to equity concerns. To inform the delivery of an organized pilot lung cancer screening program in Ontario, we sought to contextualize the lived experiences of poverty and the choice to participate in lung cancer screening. At three Toronto academic primary-care clinics, high-risk screen-eligible patients who chose or declined LDCT screening were consented; sociodemographic data was collected. Qualitative interviews were conducted. Theoretical thematic analysis was used to organize, describe and interpret the data using the morphogenetic approach as a guiding theoretical lens. Eight participants chose to undergo screening; ten did not. From interviews, we identified three themes: Pathways of disadvantage (social trajectories of events that influence lung-cancer risk and health-seeking behaviour), lung-cancer risk and early detection (upstream factors that shape smoking behaviour and lung-cancer screening choices), and safe spaces of care (care that is free of bias, conflict, criticism, or potentially threatening actions, ideas or conversations). We illuminate how 'choice' is contextual to the availability of material resources such as income and housing, and how 'choice' is influenced by having access to spaces of care that are free of judgement and personal bias. Underserved populations will require multiprong interventions that work at the individual, system and structural level to reduce inequities in lung-cancer risk and access to healthcare services such as cancer screening.
Highlights
Lung cancer is one of the most commonly diagnosed cancers in Canada, and is responsible for a quarter of all cancer-related deaths [1]
Screening using low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) has the potential to diagnose lung cancer at an earlier stage thereby increasing the likelihood of curative therapy [2]
Individuals who live with greater degrees of social disadvantage have a higher risk of some cancers and poorer overall survival; this is directly correlated with the social determinants of health and how they intersect across the cancer care continuum [29]
Summary
Lung cancer is one of the most commonly diagnosed cancers in Canada, and is responsible for a quarter of all cancer-related deaths [1]. Screening using low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) has the potential to diagnose lung cancer at an earlier stage thereby increasing the likelihood of curative therapy [2]. For lung cancer screening this is problematic since the greatest lung cancer incidence is found in populations disadvantaged by a variety of social determinants such as income and education [5]. Lung cancer screening presents two very specific challenges: (i) a disease distribution that is proportionate to the degree of social disadvantage; and (ii) an opportunity to screen for the disease in the target population, but with a potentially low uptake. Individuals living with low income are more likely to smoke, have a higher risk of lung cancer, and are less likely to participate in preventative healthcare (i.e., low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) for lung cancer screening), leading to equity concerns. To inform the delivery of an organized pilot lung cancer screening program in Ontario, we sought to contextualize the lived experiences of poverty and the choice to participate in lung cancer screening
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