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Prevalence of Depression and Coping Strategies Among Head and Neck Cancer Patients: A Hospital-Based Study

Background The burden of cancer is increasing in all countries and so is in India. Among Indian males, lung, mouth, and tongue are very common cancers. Cancer is a life-threatening stressful condition, and cancer survivors report negative effects which decrease the quality of life because of long-te...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: TS, Pradeep, Sreenath, Nagireddy Reddy, Krishna, Vamsi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10505270/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37724204
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.43687
Descripción
Sumario:Background The burden of cancer is increasing in all countries and so is in India. Among Indian males, lung, mouth, and tongue are very common cancers. Cancer is a life-threatening stressful condition, and cancer survivors report negative effects which decrease the quality of life because of long-term post-treatment effects. When cancer treatment is ongoing, patients express mixed emotion which is happiness and relief. This study aimed to find out the prevalence of depression and assess the coping strategies among the same head and neck cancer patients. Material and methods This cross-sectional study was conducted at the outpatient level in the Department of Radiotherapy, Sri Devaraj Urs Medical College (SDUMC), Sri Devaraj Urs Academy of Higher Education and Research (SDUAHER), Kolar, for a period of three years. The sample size was calculated based on the previous study. Head and Neck cancer patients who are more than 18 years old and histologically diagnosed with cancer were included in the study, and head and neck cancer patients with previously diagnosed mental illness or patients with mental health medications or chronically debilitated cancer were excluded. For sociodemographic details, a pretested semi-structured questionnaire was used. To assess depression Zung Depression Scale was used. To assess coping strategy the Cancer Coping Questionnaire was used. All data collected by interview technique which will last not less than 20 minutes. All data were entered in a Microsoft Excel sheet and analyzed using SPSS version 22 (Armonk, NY: IBM Corp.). To compare between groups, t-test and ANOVA were used with a statistically significant p<0.05. Results Of 188 head and neck cancer patients, 117 (62.2%) aged 31-60 years, 136 (72.3%) were females, 121 (64.4%) belonged to rural background, 143 (76.1%) were illiterates, 105 (55.9%) belonged to joint family, and 110 (58.5%) belonged to class IV modified BG Prasad classification. This study showed 16% of head and neck cancer patients had depression according to the Zung Depression Scale. With respect to the coping domain, cancer patients from rural backgrounds had higher coping scores, and illiterate had higher scores. With respect to the positive focus coping subdomain, male cancer patients had higher scores compared, to rural cancer patients, who had higher scores, and illiterate had higher scores. With respect to the diversion domain, rural cancer patients had higher scores, illiterate patients had higher scores, and this difference was statistically significant. With respect to the interpersonal scale domain, rural patients, patients belonging to joint families, patients aged more than 60 years, and illiterate patients had higher scores compared with literates, and these were statistically significant with p<0.05. This study demonstrated that the presence of depression had no impact on coping domains, and there was no significant correlation between depression and coping scores. Conclusion Mental health must be thoughtfully considered among cancer patients as cancer with depression may have a negative impact on their experience with cancer. Cancer keeps growing as a public health problem and all cancer-treating hospitals should work on various preventable measures for reducing the future burden of various health dimensions affected by cancer. The very intention of treating cancer should be improving the survival of the diagnosed case and this needs targeted mental health intervention.