Chinese Cancer Patients’ Willingness for Phase III Trials: Health Belief Model and Social Support
Tantan Cheng, Hanlin Zhang, Shuruo Zhang, Bingqi Han, Yuxin Hao, Xinrui Shi, Jiwei Wang, Li Liu
This study assessed Chinese cancer patients’ willingness to participate in phase III clinical trials of new anti-cancer drugs and examined influencing factors using the Health Belief Model (HBM) and social support. A cross-sectional survey recruited 480 patients from an online community through convenience sampling. Data included demographics, disease and treatment status, HBM constructs (including perceived severity, perceived benefit, perceived barrier, cue to action, self-efficacy), social support (including family’s, friends’, and others’ support), and willingness to participate. Statistical analyses involved factor analysis, reliability testing, correlations, and hierarchical regression. The mean willingness score was 2.883 (range = 1–5). Willingness varied significantly by living arrangements, employment, income, and treatments. Demographics explained 9.8% of the variance, disease and treatment status 12%, and social support 22.4%, with family support as a significant predictor (β = 0.202,