4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Screening new cancer patients for psychological distress using the hospital anxiety and depression scale

Journal

PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 534-542

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/pon.1085

Keywords

psychosocial distress; screening; anxiety; depression; adjustment; HADS; cancer coping; supportive care

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The diagnosis of a life-threatening illness creates immediate psychosocial distress for the patient and his or her family. The threat is real and the rational response is to be afraid. We need to be reaching out to patients and their families and not waiting for crises. The responsibility remains with the healthcare system and psychosocial healthcare professionals to identify those who are in most need. Psychological distress is something that can be relatively easily measured and responded to when psychosocial oncology healthcare professionals are immediately available to address those needs. This paper describes the process used to gather this information, how that information has been used by the psychosocial clinicians in the Supportive Care programme, and what we have learned, in terms of a retrospective data analysis, about our patient population. At the Cancer Centre in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada new cancer patients complete the HADS on the day of their first appointment. Since October 2000 we have collected baseline psychological distress data for 3,035 new cancer patients who fully completed all 14 items on the HADS. Of those, 781 patients, or 25.7%, scored above cutoff points; and were given a telephone call. We were able to contact 607 (or 77.7%) of these patients. Five hundred and eight (or 83.7%) of those contacted made, and subsequently attended, one or more appointments with a psychosocial counsellor. Copyright (c) 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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