Exploring Information Seeking Anxiety Among Localized Prostate Cancer Patients

Author:

Ross Levi1ORCID,Preston Michael A.23ORCID,Lee Torhonda C.4,Lockhart Jala5,Young Jordan1,Wood Angela6ORCID,Wood Ralph1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Kinesiology and Health Studies, Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond, LA, USA

2. Department of Pharmacy Practice, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA

3. Center for Health Equity and Innovation, Purdue University, Indianapolis, IN, USA

4. Department of Graduate Public Health, Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, AL, USA

5. Department of Health Science, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA

6. Department of Health and Human Sciences, Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond, LA, USA

Abstract

Information seeking anxiety is a multidimensional construct that is operationalized as having elements of worry, confusion, and disorganization. Much remains unknown about the ways information seeking anxiety operates among cancer patients in the United States. This study investigated the application of the information seeking anxiety concept among prostate cancer patients by documenting their assessment experiences and examining relationships between information seeking anxiety and treatment information search behaviors. A purposive sample of African American and Caucasian men ( N = 63) within 5 years of being diagnosed with localized disease (stage T1 or T2) were recruited to participate through cancer registries, advertisements, and word-of-mouth. Participants completed a self-administered survey with items that collected demographic information, treatment information-seeking behaviors, and information seeking anxiety evaluations. All surveys were completed in one sitting and a majority of men (82.5%, N = 52) completed the information seeking anxiety assessment with no assistance. During their first interactions with available sources of information (e.g., doctors, internet, peers), most survivors (95.2%, N = 60) reported some level of information seeking anxiety. Specifically, 55.5% ( N = 35) were confused about what to look for, 60.3% ( N = 38) were worried they would not find the right information, 55.5% ( N = 35) were uncomfortable with the search process, and 49.2% ( N = 31) reported being disorganized. The composite information seeking anxiety measure was moderately correlated with men’s self-reported time to start searching for treatment information ( p = .02; r = .306). Information seeking anxiety appears to delay the treatment information gathering activities of prostate cancer survivors with localized disease. This previously undocumented barrier to the delivery of prostate cancer care services should be investigated in other studies with larger and more diverse samples.

Funder

national cancer institute

Cancer Disparities Research in Rural and Underserved Communities: RURaL

Lab for D and I Research in Cancer Disparities

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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