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Screening for distress, the 6th vital sign: common problems in cancer outpatients over one year in usual care: associations with marital status, sex, and age

BACKGROUND: Very few studies examine the longitudinal prevalence of problems and the awareness or use of clinical programs by patients who report these problems. Of the studies that examine age, gender and marital status as predictors of a range of patient outcomes, none examines the interactions be...

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Autores principales: Giese-Davis, Janine, Waller, Amy, Carlson, Linda E, Groff, Shannon, Zhong, Lihong, Neri, Eric, Bachor, Sacha M, Adamyk-Simpson, Jassandre, Rancourt, Kate MS, Dunlop, Bernie, Bultz, Barry D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3528655/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23031647
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-12-441
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author Giese-Davis, Janine
Waller, Amy
Carlson, Linda E
Groff, Shannon
Zhong, Lihong
Neri, Eric
Bachor, Sacha M
Adamyk-Simpson, Jassandre
Rancourt, Kate MS
Dunlop, Bernie
Bultz, Barry D
author_facet Giese-Davis, Janine
Waller, Amy
Carlson, Linda E
Groff, Shannon
Zhong, Lihong
Neri, Eric
Bachor, Sacha M
Adamyk-Simpson, Jassandre
Rancourt, Kate MS
Dunlop, Bernie
Bultz, Barry D
author_sort Giese-Davis, Janine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Very few studies examine the longitudinal prevalence of problems and the awareness or use of clinical programs by patients who report these problems. Of the studies that examine age, gender and marital status as predictors of a range of patient outcomes, none examines the interactions between these demographic variables. This study examined the typical trajectory of common practical and psychosocial problems endorsed over 12 months in a usual-care sample of cancer outpatients. Specifically, we examined whether marital status, sex, age, and their interactions predicted these trajectories. We did not actively triage or refer patients in this study in order to examine the natural course of problem reports. METHODS: Patients completed baseline screening (N = 1196 of 1707 approached) and the sample included more men (N = 696) than women (N = 498), average age 61.1 years. The most common diagnoses were gastrointestinal (27.1%), prostate (19.2%), skin (11.1%) and gynecological (9.2%). Among other measures, patients completed a Common Problem Checklist and Psychosocial Resources Use questions at baseline, 3, 6, and 12 months using paper and pencil surveys. RESULTS: Results indicated that patients reported psychosocial problems more often than practical and both decreased significantly over time. Younger single patients reported more practical problems than those in committed relationships. Younger patients and women of all ages reported more psychosocial problems. Among a number of interesting interactions, for practical problems, single older patients improved more; whereas among married people, younger patients improved more. For psychosocial problems we found that older female patients improved more than younger females, but among males, it was younger patients who improved more. Young single men and women reported the most past-and future-use of services. CONCLUSIONS: Younger women are particularly vulnerable to experiencing practical and psychosocial problems when diagnosed with cancer, but being married protects these younger women. Marriage appeared to buffer reports of both practical and psychosocial problems, and led to less awareness and use of services. Unexpectedly, young men reported the highest use of psychosocial services. This study informs clinical program development with information on these risk groups.
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spelling pubmed-35286552013-01-03 Screening for distress, the 6th vital sign: common problems in cancer outpatients over one year in usual care: associations with marital status, sex, and age Giese-Davis, Janine Waller, Amy Carlson, Linda E Groff, Shannon Zhong, Lihong Neri, Eric Bachor, Sacha M Adamyk-Simpson, Jassandre Rancourt, Kate MS Dunlop, Bernie Bultz, Barry D BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: Very few studies examine the longitudinal prevalence of problems and the awareness or use of clinical programs by patients who report these problems. Of the studies that examine age, gender and marital status as predictors of a range of patient outcomes, none examines the interactions between these demographic variables. This study examined the typical trajectory of common practical and psychosocial problems endorsed over 12 months in a usual-care sample of cancer outpatients. Specifically, we examined whether marital status, sex, age, and their interactions predicted these trajectories. We did not actively triage or refer patients in this study in order to examine the natural course of problem reports. METHODS: Patients completed baseline screening (N = 1196 of 1707 approached) and the sample included more men (N = 696) than women (N = 498), average age 61.1 years. The most common diagnoses were gastrointestinal (27.1%), prostate (19.2%), skin (11.1%) and gynecological (9.2%). Among other measures, patients completed a Common Problem Checklist and Psychosocial Resources Use questions at baseline, 3, 6, and 12 months using paper and pencil surveys. RESULTS: Results indicated that patients reported psychosocial problems more often than practical and both decreased significantly over time. Younger single patients reported more practical problems than those in committed relationships. Younger patients and women of all ages reported more psychosocial problems. Among a number of interesting interactions, for practical problems, single older patients improved more; whereas among married people, younger patients improved more. For psychosocial problems we found that older female patients improved more than younger females, but among males, it was younger patients who improved more. Young single men and women reported the most past-and future-use of services. CONCLUSIONS: Younger women are particularly vulnerable to experiencing practical and psychosocial problems when diagnosed with cancer, but being married protects these younger women. Marriage appeared to buffer reports of both practical and psychosocial problems, and led to less awareness and use of services. Unexpectedly, young men reported the highest use of psychosocial services. This study informs clinical program development with information on these risk groups. BioMed Central 2012-10-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3528655/ /pubmed/23031647 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-12-441 Text en Copyright ©2012 Giese-Davis et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Giese-Davis, Janine
Waller, Amy
Carlson, Linda E
Groff, Shannon
Zhong, Lihong
Neri, Eric
Bachor, Sacha M
Adamyk-Simpson, Jassandre
Rancourt, Kate MS
Dunlop, Bernie
Bultz, Barry D
Screening for distress, the 6th vital sign: common problems in cancer outpatients over one year in usual care: associations with marital status, sex, and age
title Screening for distress, the 6th vital sign: common problems in cancer outpatients over one year in usual care: associations with marital status, sex, and age
title_full Screening for distress, the 6th vital sign: common problems in cancer outpatients over one year in usual care: associations with marital status, sex, and age
title_fullStr Screening for distress, the 6th vital sign: common problems in cancer outpatients over one year in usual care: associations with marital status, sex, and age
title_full_unstemmed Screening for distress, the 6th vital sign: common problems in cancer outpatients over one year in usual care: associations with marital status, sex, and age
title_short Screening for distress, the 6th vital sign: common problems in cancer outpatients over one year in usual care: associations with marital status, sex, and age
title_sort screening for distress, the 6th vital sign: common problems in cancer outpatients over one year in usual care: associations with marital status, sex, and age
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3528655/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23031647
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-12-441
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