Evaluation of Psychosocial Problems of the Homebound Cancer Patient: I. Methodology and Problem Frequencies

Abstract
Psychological problem frequencies of very ill, homebound cancer patients were studied using an instrument entitled “Psychosocial Problem Categories for Homebound Cancer Patients.” This instrument contains thirteen major categories of problems and fifty individual problems. A total of 570 patient records were obtained from two visiting nurse agencies in two different counties. Records were rated by a pair of trained raters, with level of interrater reliability being r = 0.96. Intervention frequencies by visiting health care professionals were also assessed. Percentages are based on at least one mention of problem or intervention. The five most frequent problem categories included: 1) Somatic side effects, 30% of total problems, of which pain involved 13% of total problems, 2) Patient mood disturbance, 15% of total problems, 3) Equipment problems, 8% of total problems, 4) Family relationship impairment, 7% of total problems, and 5) Cognitive impairment, 6% of total problems. The three most frequent interventions included: 1) Instructor/reinforcement to patient/family, 22% of total interventions, 2) No intervention for problem, 17% of total interventions, and 3) Counseling/emotional support, 17% of total interventions. Because the assessment instrument showed high interrater reliabilities for the two demographically dissimilar patient populations, it may be adaptable to heterogeneous populations.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: