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Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer 11/2016

01-11-2016 | Original Article

Which items on the distress thermometer problem list are the most distressing?

Authors: Kerrie Ann Clover, Christopher Oldmeadow, Louise Nelson, Kerry Rogers, Alex J Mitchell, Gregory Carter

Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer | Issue 11/2016

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Abstract

Purpose

The importance of distress identification and management in oncology has been established. We examined the relationship between distress and unmet bio-psychosocial needs, applying advanced statistical techniques, to identify which needs have the closest relationship to distress.

Methods

Oncology outpatients (n = 1066) undergoing QUICATOUCH screening in an Australian cancer centre completed the distress thermometer (DT) and problem list (PL). Principal component analysis (PCA), logistic regression and classification and regression tree (CART) analyses tested the relationship between DT score (at a cut-off point of 4) and PL items.

Results

Sixteen items were reported by <5 % of participants. PCA analysis identified four major components. Logistic regression analysis indicated three of these component scores, and four individual items (20 items in total) demonstrated a significant independent relationship with distress. The best CART model contained only two PL items: ‘worry’ and ‘depression’.

Conclusions

The DT and PL function as intended, quantifying negative emotional experience (distress) and identifying bio-psychosocial sources of distress. We offer two suggestions to minimise PL response time whilst targeting PL items most related to distress, thereby increasing clinical utility. To identify patients who might require specialised psychological services, we suggest the DT followed by a short, case-finding instrument for patients over threshold on the DT. To identify other important sources of distress, we suggest using a modified PL of 14 key items, with the 15th item ‘any other problem’ as a simple safety net question. Shorter times for patient completion and clinician response to endorsed PL items will maximise acceptance and clinical utility.
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Metadata
Title
Which items on the distress thermometer problem list are the most distressing?
Authors
Kerrie Ann Clover
Christopher Oldmeadow
Louise Nelson
Kerry Rogers
Alex J Mitchell
Gregory Carter
Publication date
01-11-2016
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Supportive Care in Cancer / Issue 11/2016
Print ISSN: 0941-4355
Electronic ISSN: 1433-7339
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-016-3294-z

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