Author:
Crump Raewyn,Fitzgerald Ruth,Legge Michael
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Mutations in the BRCA (breast cancer) 1 and 2 genes are thought to lead to 5–10% of breast cancers. AIM: A qualitative study to explore six New Zealand women’s experiences of living with increased risk for a genetic susceptibility to breast cancer. METHODS: Six women were interviewed using semi-structured interviews, to explore their experiences of living at high risk for developing breast cancer due to familial and/or individual genetic susceptibilities. Results were analysed using thematic coding. After a three-year interval, interviewees were contacted again to discuss their experiences (although two were lost to follow-up). FINDINGS: The women held fatalistic views on developing cancer and drew on family experience as much as biomedical research to assess their situation. They became increasingly immersed in biomedical screening and prophylaxis without accompanying improvement to their peace of mind and with unrealistic ideas of it ‘preventing’ cancer. The biomedical management options and advice they reported receiving was factually inconsistent and a discrepancy emerged between women’s expectations of breast cancer health services (including genetic testing) and the delivered support and services. CONCLUSION: This small sample group cannot be used to draw implications on the views of the wider group of higher risk patients, but for these six women, genetic testing, screening and prophylaxis have not provided peace of mind; rather the reverse has occurred. The findings are provocative as they challenge the biomedical idea of patients’ experience of managing their genetic risk information as routinely positive. KEYWORDS: Qualitative research; genes BRCA1; genes BRCA2; breast neoplasm; risk
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine
Cited by
4 articles.
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