Rapid screening for psychologic distress in men with prostate carcinoma
- 15 May 1998
- Vol. 82 (10) , 1904-1908
- https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-0142(19980515)82:10<1904::aid-cncr13>3.0.co;2-x
Abstract
As more oncology care is moved to the outpatient setting, the need for a rapid means for oncologists to identify patients with significant distress has increased. Concurrent with this move has been the pressure to reduce time spent with each patient, adding to the likelihood that a distressed patient will not be recognized and will remain untreated in the current health care environment. A pilot program was conducted in a prostate carcinoma oncology clinic to test the feasibility of a two-stage approach that identifies patients in significant distress and refers them for treatment. Two pencil and paper self-report measures were used to detect psychologic distress in patients over the previous week: 1) The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and 2) "The Distress Thermometer." Patients who scored above an agreed upon cutoff score on either measure (HADS = 15+; Thermometer = 5+) were referred to the psychiatric liaison in the clinic for evaluation. Compliance in filling out the measures was excellent; only 8 of 121 patients (6.6%) refused. Thirty-one percent of evaluable patients were referred based on elevated scores. Seventeen of 29 patients actually were evaluated. Eight of 17 patients met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (of Mental Disorders)-IV criteria for a psychiatric disorder. This approach for rapid screening for distress was acceptable in prostate carcinoma patients, although these older men were reluctant to agree to evaluation and treatment. This simple screening method needs further testing and the identification of barriers on the part of the patient and oncologist that impede the identification of the most distressed patients. Cancer 1998;82:1904-8. © 1998 American Cancer Society.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Health-related quality of life among patients with metastatic prostate cancerUrology, 1997
- Sexual quality of life in men with prostate cancerCancer, 1995
- Quality-of-Life Outcomes in Men Treated for Localized Prostate CancerJAMA, 1995
- Quality of life of patients with prostate cancer and their spouses. The value of a data base in clinical careCancer, 1994
- Quality of life in patients with prostatic cancer a feasibility studyCancer, 1993
- Sex or survival: trade-offs between quality and quantity of life.Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1991
- Quality of life and treatment of hormone resistant metastatic prostatic cancerEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1990
- Flushing long-term side effect of orchiectomy in treatment of prostatic carcinomaUrology, 1989
- Development of a Brief Screening Instrument for Detecting Depressive DisordersMedical Care, 1988
- Mental disorders in primary care: Epidemiologic, diagnostic, and treatment research directionsGeneral Hospital Psychiatry, 1988