Temporality and timework: Danish endometrial cancer patients’ experiences of an accelerated cancer patient pathway

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Abstract

Early diagnosis and rapid treatment are deemed essential in relation to cancer. In 2007, Denmark implemented accelerated cancer patient pathways with predetermined time frames to reduce waiting time. In this article, based on fieldwork with observations at two hospitals and ethnographic interviews, we examine temporal experiences of the cancer patient pathway for endometrial cancer of the uterus at stage I. Results show that while the cancer patient pathway helps suspend thoughts of death it also brings a sense of timely confusion and concerns about whether disease has spread. This ambivalence is linked to a political discourse of cancer in general as acute and a clinical, biomedical framing of endometrial cancer in particular as “good” due to its slow growth. We demonstrate how women customize their temporal experiences to accelerate or decelerate time and argue that waiting is not necessarily a passive state. We emphasize the need for professionals to be aware that the cancer patient pathway time and subjective patient time are not always synchronized.

Original languageEnglish
JournalTime & Society
Volume29
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)866-891
ISSN0961-463X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1. Aug 2020

Keywords

  • Inner time
  • anthropology
  • endometrial cancer
  • fragmentation of time
  • gynecological cancer
  • qualitative research
  • temporal dimensions
  • time management
  • waiting time

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