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. 2015 Apr 16;25:15028. doi: 10.1038/npjpcrm.2015.28

Table 3. Participants’ emotional reactions to a pulmonary nodule.

Persistent distress
General
  Veteran O-V2 ‘Yeah. Those [nodules] I was definitely worried about. I really was. Yeah. It was kind of, you know, off and on. I’d think about it. It would get me a little depressed.’
  Veteran D-V2 ‘No I kinda carried it [stress] the whole time. And things triggered it. You know seeing stuff on TV talking about cancer, just hearing things triggered it.’
Length of follow-up
  Veteran Q-V2 ‘Because from the first initial CT exam to the last one there was a lot of time there that… you be thinking about this and you just wanna hurry up and know what’s happening with your body.’
  Veteran L-V2 ‘The other part of this is, I thought like, ‘well I’m waiting a year,’ and anything that I found out if there is an issue, that the sooner you deal with it the better off you are, and I thought waiting a year for another x-ray or scan is like way too long.’
   
Decreased distress over time
General
  Veteran L-V2 ‘Well I would say the first month or two was probably 6 or 7 [distress level], and then it dropped down to probably 3 or 4, and then it went down probably recently more like a- when I saw my primary care physician again I’d say it was probably just curiosity, it was probably more like 1 or 2.’
  Veteran D-V3 ‘Well no, you know I worried about it a little bit but no, I wasn’t freaked out like I was the first time [interview].’
Lack of symptoms
  Veteran F-V3 ‘No because it’s something that doesn’t bother you. You know? When something bothers you of course then you know.’
Favourable result
  Veteran I-V2 ‘Well the relief was that they said it was better, that the results looked better than before.’
Cues from PCP
  Veteran H-V3 ‘Um, [the PCP] was very matter of fact about it. Uh, [the PCP] said they didn’t think it was [cancer], [the PCP] didn’t think it was, but we’d keep an eye on it. And I wasn’t feeling, you know, bad or anything and I said, ‘ok.’’

Abbreviations: CT, computed tomography; PCP, primary care provider; V2, visit two; V3, visit three.