AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates why some breast cancer patients delay seeking treatment, aiming to find behavioral economic factors and personality traits linked to this delay.
  • - Researchers analyzed surveys from 41 patients, identifying that 11 experienced a delayed diagnosis (over 6 months to seek medical help after noticing symptoms).
  • - Key findings showed that patients with delayed diagnoses often had less experience with screenings, advanced disease stages, and lower time preference rates, with no major differences in other economic factors or personalities.

Article Abstract

Background: Delays in breast cancer diagnosis can allow the disease to progress to an incurable stage. However, factors that cause patients to delay seeking treatment are unclear. In this study, we aimed to identify behavioral economic factors and personality characteristics of patients with breast cancer who had a delayed diagnosis.

Methods: We analyzed questionnaires completed by 41 patients with breast cancer. A delayed diagnosis was defined if the time between the first symptom and the medical visit was more than 6 months.

Results: We found 11 patients who had a delayed diagnosis. The significant characteristics associated with patients with breast cancer who had delayed diagnosis were: (i) less experience with breast cancer screening; (ii) progressive disease stage; and (iii) low time and future time preference. We found no significant behavioral economic factors other than time preference, and personality that differed between patients with breast cancer who did and did not have a delayed diagnosis.

Conclusion: Low time preference rate is a characteristic of patients with breast cancer who had a delayed diagnosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10770666PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.31557/APJCP.2023.24.10.3437DOI Listing

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