16 September 2019
What role does fate play when it comes to the 145,000 people diagnosed with cancer each year in Australia?
Smoking, sun exposure, poor diet, alcohol consumption and inadequate exercise are proven risk factors for many types of cancer, but new research shows this message is not getting through to many patients.
According to an international study led by the University of Newcastle and Vietnam Cancer Institute, and involving the University of South Australia (UniSA), Australian cancer patients identified ‘bad luck’ or fate as the third most common perceived cause of their cancer - behind age and family history.
The study compared the perceptions between 585 cancer patients in Australia and Vietnam, analysing differences across 25 possible beliefs about what may have caused their cancer.
Almost half of the Australian cancer patients believed “getting older” was the main cause of their cancer, while most Vietnamese patients cited “poor diet” as the main contributing factor of their cancer.
Overall, smoking was ranked the 5th most likely cause and alcohol the 9th most likely cause. This is despite repeated health messages that many cancers are preventable, and alcohol and smoking are both high risk factors for many cancer types.
UniSA Research Chair of Cancer Epidemiology and Population Health, Professor David Roder, says there are many misconceptions about what causes cancer.
“Unfortunately, people’s understanding of many cancer-related risk factors is modest to low. People’s beliefs about what may have caused their cancer are complex and likely to be impacted by multiple factors, including cultural beliefs,” he says.
The survey revealed some significant differences between Australian and Vietnamese cancer patients, including:
The two cultures gave similar rankings in just four areas: smoking (5th overall), mental illness (20), prescribed medication (23) and injury or physical trauma (25).
HMRI researcher Dr Alix Hall, one of the study leaders, says a substantial proportion of both Australian (27 per cent) and Vietnamese (47 per cent) patients held fatalistic views about the possible causes of their cancer.
“In the Australian sample, “bad luck” was ranked third and in the Vietnamese sample it was ranked fifth.
“This is concerning because it suggests they believe they have little control over their health. That may affect their willingness to change their behaviour when it comes to diet and lifestyle, and influence their decisions relating to treatment and/or care,” Hall says.
The researchers say the study findings underline why public health campaigns need to highlight accurate information about the possible causes of cancer.
Their paper, “What Caused my Cancer?” has been published in Cancer Control.
Media contact: Candy Gibson office: +61 8 8302 0961 mobile: +61 434 605 142
email: candy.gibson@unisa.edu.au
Researchers: Professor David Roder office +61 8 8302 2640 mobile: 0478 408 386; email: david.roder@unisa.edu.au; Dr Alix Hall office: 02 4042 0641 email: alix.hall@hmri.org.au
Additional notes
The research collaborators included the University of Newcastle, Hunter Medical Research Institute, the University of South Australia Cancer Research Institute, the Vietnam National Cancer Hospital, Vietnam and the Hanoi Medical University.