Expressions of Perceived Severity towards Nasopharyngeal Cancer

Perceived severity of diseases influences health protective behaviour. Although the causes of cancer are not definitive, the public can seek regular cancer screening to detect cancer early to bring about better treatment outcomes. The study investigated perceived severity of nasopharyngeal cancer (N...

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Main Authors: Ting, Su Hie, Ho, Jia-Yiing, Podin, Yuwana
Format: Proceeding
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34650/1/perceived1.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34650/
http://conference.loupiasconference.org/index.php/ICoGEMT/article/view/153
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spelling my.unimas.ir.346502021-12-19T09:56:15Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34650/ Expressions of Perceived Severity towards Nasopharyngeal Cancer Ting, Su Hie Ho, Jia-Yiing Podin, Yuwana Q Science (General) R Medicine (General) Perceived severity of diseases influences health protective behaviour. Although the causes of cancer are not definitive, the public can seek regular cancer screening to detect cancer early to bring about better treatment outcomes. The study investigated perceived severity of nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) among Malaysians, focusing on their expressions of disease seriousness. The participants were 65 Malaysians aged 13 to 65. They were interviewed about their perceived severity towards NPC before and after reading an NPC pamphlet produced by the Ministry of Health, Malaysia in Malay. A majority of the participants perceived NPC as a severe disease linked to death, scary symptoms, and disruption to the quality of life. The analysis revealed that before reading the pamphlet, the participants said that the word "cancer" made them fearful, and it is associated with images of sick and suffering patients, side-effects of chemotherapy which includes loss of appetite and weight, and the despondence of "waiting for death". This is based on their general knowledge of NPC. After reading the pamphlet, the participants' knowledge of NPC severity increased, indicated by the highlighting of NPC incidence (“the fourth most common cancer in Malaysia") and symptoms such as "blurry vision", "double vision", "lumps on neck" and "bleeding" scary. The study suggests that perceived severity of this cancer is affected by the words used in health pamphlets, which indicates the importance of disease risk communication materials in creating public awareness on health protective behaviour. 2021-01-30 Proceeding PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34650/1/perceived1.pdf Ting, Su Hie and Ho, Jia-Yiing and Podin, Yuwana (2021) Expressions of Perceived Severity towards Nasopharyngeal Cancer. In: The First International Conference on Government Education Management and Tourism., 9 January 2021, Bandung, Indonesia. http://conference.loupiasconference.org/index.php/ICoGEMT/article/view/153
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic Q Science (General)
R Medicine (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
R Medicine (General)
Ting, Su Hie
Ho, Jia-Yiing
Podin, Yuwana
Expressions of Perceived Severity towards Nasopharyngeal Cancer
description Perceived severity of diseases influences health protective behaviour. Although the causes of cancer are not definitive, the public can seek regular cancer screening to detect cancer early to bring about better treatment outcomes. The study investigated perceived severity of nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) among Malaysians, focusing on their expressions of disease seriousness. The participants were 65 Malaysians aged 13 to 65. They were interviewed about their perceived severity towards NPC before and after reading an NPC pamphlet produced by the Ministry of Health, Malaysia in Malay. A majority of the participants perceived NPC as a severe disease linked to death, scary symptoms, and disruption to the quality of life. The analysis revealed that before reading the pamphlet, the participants said that the word "cancer" made them fearful, and it is associated with images of sick and suffering patients, side-effects of chemotherapy which includes loss of appetite and weight, and the despondence of "waiting for death". This is based on their general knowledge of NPC. After reading the pamphlet, the participants' knowledge of NPC severity increased, indicated by the highlighting of NPC incidence (“the fourth most common cancer in Malaysia") and symptoms such as "blurry vision", "double vision", "lumps on neck" and "bleeding" scary. The study suggests that perceived severity of this cancer is affected by the words used in health pamphlets, which indicates the importance of disease risk communication materials in creating public awareness on health protective behaviour.
format Proceeding
author Ting, Su Hie
Ho, Jia-Yiing
Podin, Yuwana
author_facet Ting, Su Hie
Ho, Jia-Yiing
Podin, Yuwana
author_sort Ting, Su Hie
title Expressions of Perceived Severity towards Nasopharyngeal Cancer
title_short Expressions of Perceived Severity towards Nasopharyngeal Cancer
title_full Expressions of Perceived Severity towards Nasopharyngeal Cancer
title_fullStr Expressions of Perceived Severity towards Nasopharyngeal Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Expressions of Perceived Severity towards Nasopharyngeal Cancer
title_sort expressions of perceived severity towards nasopharyngeal cancer
publishDate 2021
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34650/1/perceived1.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34650/
http://conference.loupiasconference.org/index.php/ICoGEMT/article/view/153
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score 13.160551