Affiliation: | 1. Departments of Psychiatry, Medicine, and Family Medicine, University of Rochester Medical Center, 300 Crittenden Blvd., Rochester, NY, 14642, USA;2. Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Rochester Medical Center, 300 Crittenden Blvd., Rochester, NY, 14642, USA;3. Departments of Psychiatry and Public Health Sciences, University of Rochester Medical Center, 300 Crittenden Blvd., Rochester, NY, 14642, USA;4. Departments of Psychiatry, Medicine, and Psychology, Tulane University, 2007 Percival Stern Hall, New Orleans, LA, 70118, USA;5. Department of Medicine, Divisions of Nephrology and Palliative Care, University of Rochester Medical Center, 601 Elmwood Ave., Rochester, NY, 14642, USA;6. Department of Medicine and Wilmot Cancer Institute, University of Rochester Medical Center, 601 Elmwood Ave., Rochester, NY, 14642, USA;g. Department of Pediatric Oncology and Division of Population Sciences, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, 450 Brookline Ave., Boston, MA, 02215, USA;h. 25 Shattuck Street, Boston, MA 02115, USA |
Abstract: | ObjectiveUnderstanding socioeconomic disparities in the care of patients with incurable cancer is a high priority. We hypothesized that patients without a high school education are more likely to believe that they could be cured and we explored the role of fatalism.MethodsWe studied 977 patients with advanced, incurable cancer. Two logistic regression analyses were conducted. Model One examined the effect of education on beliefs about curability. Model Two added fatalism.ResultsThe significant association between having less than a high school education and the belief that advanced cancer can be cured (OR = 2.55; 95% CI: 1.09–5.96) in Model One was attenuated by 39% and rendered nonsignificant in Model Two. Fatalism was associated with the belief that advanced cancer can be cured. Whites were less likely to believe they could be cured than Blacks and Asians/Pacific Islanders. Beliefs about curability were not associated with income or insurance status.ConclusionsPeople who do not complete high school are more likely to believe that their advanced cancer is curable, in part because they are more likely to hold fatalistic worldviews.Practice implicationsInterventions to help oncologists care for patients with fatalistic beliefs could mitigate socioeconomic disparities in end-of-life care. |