Disclosure of Cancer Diagnosis to Patients and their Relatives in Turkey: Views of Accompanying Persons and Influential Factors in Reaching those Views

Aims and Background In Turkey, it is a common belief that most family members of patients with cancer would not want them to be informed of a diagnosis of cancer. Our aim was to evaluate the attitudes and opinions of people accompanying cancer patients, regarding cancer diagnosis disclosure. Methods In a cross-sectional study 270 caregivers accompanying cancer patients during outpatient chemotherapy sessions were asked to fill in a questionnaire to determine their opinions regarding whether the diagnosis of cancer should be disclosed to the patients and their relatives or not. Timing of telling the diagnosis and from whom it should be learned were queried as well. Possible influential factors for the answers were analyzed with the chi-square test. Results Of the 270 accompanying persons, 130 (48.2%) said that the patients should be informed of the diagnosis, whereas a greater number (236, 87.4%) believed that the patient's relatives should be informed. Being younger than 40 years old (P = 0.0005), being unmarried (P = 0.002), having a higher educational status (P = 0.0001) and having passed less than four months since the diagnosis (P = 0.005) positively affected opinions regarding telling the truth to the patient. Higher education (P = 0.012) and high monthly income (P = 0.002) positively affected opinions regarding disclosing a diagnosis of cancer to the patient's relatives. Conclusion As a result, in a survey of caregivers’ points of view, more than half of the accompanying persons did not agree with disclosing a cancer diagnosis to patients, whereas the majority agreed with disclosing it to the relatives, and educational level seemed to be the major influential factor.

[1]  H. Bozcuk,et al.  “Do not tell”: what factors affect relatives’ attitudes to honest disclosure of diagnosis to cancer patients? , 2004, Supportive Care in Cancer.

[2]  L. Vlahos,et al.  Cancer information disclosure in different cultural contexts , 2004, Supportive Care in Cancer.

[3]  F. Karadağ,et al.  Psychiatric morbidity among cancer patients and awareness of illness , 2004, Supportive Care in Cancer.

[4]  L. Fallowfield,et al.  Truth may hurt but deceit hurts more: communication in palliative care , 2002, Palliative medicine.

[5]  W. Baile,et al.  Oncologists' attitudes toward and practices in giving bad news: an exploratory study. , 2002, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[6]  A. Qasem,et al.  DISCLOSURE OF CANCER DIAGNOSIS AND PROGNOSIS BY PHYSICIANS IN KUWAIT , 2002, International journal of clinical practice.

[7]  S. O’Keeffe,et al.  Telling the truth about cancer: views of elderly patients and their relatives. , 2000, Irish medical journal.

[8]  G. Hamadeh,et al.  Cancer truth disclosure by Lebanese doctors. , 1998, Social science & medicine.

[9]  S. Yamawaki,et al.  Truth‐telling Practice in Cancer Care in Japan , 1997, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[10]  Sawsan EL‐GHAZALI Is It Wise to Tell the Truth, the Whole Truth, and Nothing but the Truth to a Cancer Patient? , 1997, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[11]  N. Britten,et al.  Respecting the autonomy of cancer patients when talking with their families: qualitative analysis of semistructured interviews with patients , 1996, BMJ.

[12]  K. Mystakidou,et al.  Disclosure of Diagnostic Information to Cancer Patients in Greece , 1996, Palliative medicine.

[13]  D. Strouse Patient-centered medicine. , 1996, JAMA.

[14]  F. Davidoff,et al.  Patient-Centered Medicine: A Professional Evolution , 1996 .

[15]  A. Surbone Truth telling to the patient. , 1992, JAMA.

[16]  F. Stiefel,et al.  Cancer diagnosis disclosure in a Spanish hospital: how do they discuss treatment options? , 1992, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

[17]  A. Liberati,et al.  Original article: Disclosure of breast cancer diagnosis: Patient and physician reports , 1991 .

[18]  S. Gautam,et al.  Communicating with Cancer Patients , 1987, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[19]  R. L. Smith,et al.  Changes in physicians' attitudes toward telling the cancer patient. , 1979, JAMA.

[20]  M. Özdoğan,et al.  Does awareness of diagnosis make any difference to quality of life? , 2002, Supportive Care in Cancer.

[21]  L. Grassi,et al.  Physicians' attitudes to and problems with truth-telling to cancer patients , 2000, Supportive Care in Cancer.

[22]  K. Sng Cancer: to tell or not to tell? , 1994, Singapore medical journal.

[23]  A. Liberati,et al.  Disclosure of breast cancer diagnosis: patient and physician reports. GIVIO (Interdisciplinary Group for Cancer Care Evaluation, Italy) , 1991, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

[24]  J. Holland,et al.  Psychosocial issues: An international survey of physician attitudes and practice in regard to revealing the diagnosis of cancer , 1987 .