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. 2015 Nov;51(16):2473–2479. doi: 10.1016/j.ejca.2015.07.014

Table 2.

Experience of cancer ‘warning signs’ and symptom attributions.

aPersistent cough or hoarseness Persistent change in bowel habits Persistent
unexplained pain
Persistent change in bladder habits Change in the appearance of a mole Unexplained lump Sore that does not heal Unexplained weight loss Persistent
difficulty swallowing
Unexplained bleeding
% (n) reporting symptom 16.9 (629) 12.9 (483) 12.8 (476) 11.1 (413) 7.3 (273) 5.5 (205) 4.0 (148) 3.8 (143) 3.2 (120) 2.9 (108)
Attribution % (n) (n = 545) (n = 363) (n = 370) (n = 294) (n = 178) (n = 147) (n = 114) (n = 107) (n = 87) (n = 86)
Physical (non-cancer) 59.8 (326) 39.0 (142) 53.2 (197) 47.3 (139) 15.7 (28) 46.3 (68) 49.1 (56) 27.1 (29) 52.9 (46) 55.8 (48)
Psychological 3.1 (17) 8.5 (31) 4.3 (16) 3.7 (11) 0.6 (1) 2.0 (3) 1.0 (0.9) 18.7 (20) 9.2 (8) 3.5 (3)
External/normalising 33.8 (184) 45.7 (166) 27.8 (103) 41.2 (121) 44.4 (79) 17.0 (25) 28.1 (32) 44.9 (48) 16.1 (14) 20.9 (18)
Cancer 1.5 (8) 3.0 (11) 1.4 (5) 0.7 (2) 10.7 (19) 8.8 (13) 3.5 (4) 0.9 (1) 4.6 (4) 4.7 (4)
Don’t know 6.6 (36) 9.4 (34) 12.2 (45) 10.9 (32) 18.5 (33) 21.1 (31) 15.8 (18) 12.1 (13) 18.4 (16) 14.0 (12)
a

Persistent was defined as ‘doesn’t go away’.

Each person could make more than one attribution and all attributions are included, so columns don’t add up to 100%.