Measuring Quality of Life in Routine Oncology Practice Improves Communication and Patient Well-Being: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Yorkshire Cancer Research · Cancer Research UK · +1 more institution
Abstract
Patients in the intervention and attention-control groups had better HRQL than the control group (P =.006 and P =.01, respectively), but the intervention and attention-control groups were not significantly different (P =.80). A positive effect on emotional well-being was associated with feedback of data (P =.008), but not with instrument completion (P =.12). A larger proportion of intervention patients showed clinically meaningful improvement in HRQL. More frequent discussion of chronic nonspecific symptoms (P =.03) was found in the intervention group, without prolonging encounters. There was no detectable effect on patient management (P =.60). In the intervention patients, HRQL improvement was associated with explicit use of HRQL data (P =.016), discussion of pain, and role function (P =.046).
Routine assessment of cancer patients' HRQL had an impact on physician-patient communication and resulted in benefits for some patients, who had better HRQL and emotional functioning.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.91
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 33
Authors
7- GVGalina VelikovaCorresponding
Yorkshire Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK, St James's University Hospital
- LBLaura Booth
Yorkshire Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK, St James's University Hospital
- ABAdam B. Smith
Yorkshire Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK, St James's University Hospital
- PBPaul Brown
Yorkshire Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK, St James's University Hospital
- PLPamela Lynch
Yorkshire Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK, St James's University Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Quality of life (healthcare)
- Intervention (counseling)
- Anxiety
- Randomized controlled trial
- Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale
- Physical therapy
- Clinical trial