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Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer 10/2015

01-10-2015 | Original Article

The influence of life stage on supportive care and information needs in cancer patients: does older age matter?

Authors: Maggie Watson, Sue Davolls, Kabir Mohammed, Sarah Shepherd

Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer | Issue 10/2015

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to clarify the effect of older age, on supportive care needs, information satisfaction and service needs in the year following a cancer diagnosis.

Methods

Primary or recurrent prostate, breast, lung or colorectal cancer patients (n = 394) were prospectively surveyed 3 and 9 months post-diagnosis using the Support Care Needs Survey (SCNS-LF59) and Information Satisfaction (ISQ) and Service Needs (SNQ) questionnaires. Two age groups were compared: ≥65 years (senior) versus ≤64 years (junior).

Results

Few differences emerged between age groups (SCNS) with the exception of psychological (p < 0.001) and sexuality (p < 0.001) domains where these were greater in the younger patients 3 months post-diagnosis. Sexuality (p < 0.001) and patient care and support (p = 0.023) needs were predicted by age (continuous); younger patients had more needs at 3 months post-diagnosis. For information satisfaction, the older group preferred doctors to make decisions (3 months p < 0.001; 9 months p = 0.008) and preferred positive information (3 months p = 0.006). For the whole group fears about cancer spreading (51 %) and returning (45 %) predominate, alongside patients’ concerns about worries of those closest to them (51 %) and uncertainty about their future (42 %) at 3 months.

Conclusions

Older patients differ on information satisfaction showing a preference for doctors to make treatment decisions. For supportive care, there were few age differences; however, the SCNS sexuality and patient care and support domains indicate greater need in younger patients around the 3-month period following diagnosis. With a few exceptions, individual rather than age-specific needs determine supportive and informational care requirements.
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Footnotes
1
The analysis was also made excluding scores in the ‘unsure’ category. As there were no differences in probability values, we report only the scores as indicated.
 
2
Data not available on characteristics of the non-responder group.
 
3
For QoL, increasing scores on general health (GH) and physical health (PH) are related to improvements in functioning
 
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Metadata
Title
The influence of life stage on supportive care and information needs in cancer patients: does older age matter?
Authors
Maggie Watson
Sue Davolls
Kabir Mohammed
Sarah Shepherd
Publication date
01-10-2015
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Supportive Care in Cancer / Issue 10/2015
Print ISSN: 0941-4355
Electronic ISSN: 1433-7339
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-015-2665-1

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