15 results on '"Bartula I"'
Search Results
2. To be mortal is human: professional consensus around the need for more psychology in palliative care
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Sansom-Daly, UM, Lobb, EA, Evans, HE, Breen, LJ, Ugalde, A, Best, M, Zomerdijk, N, Beasley, EA, Taylor, KL, Clayton, J, Sharpe, L, Bartula, I, Olver, I, and PoCoG End of Life Care Special Interest Group
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Terminal Care ,Consensus ,Communication ,Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing ,Palliative Care ,Humans ,1110 Nursing, 1117 Public Health and Health Services - Published
- 2021
3. CN65 Feasibility, acceptability and utility of a pilot nurse-led survivorship program for people with metastatic melanoma
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Lai-Kwon, J.E., Kelly, B., Lane, S., Biviano, R., Bartula, I., Brennan, F., Kivikoski, I., Dhillon, H., Thompson, J., Menzies, A.M., and Long, G.V.
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- 2022
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4. Supportive care needs in Australian melanoma patients and caregivers: results from a quantitative cross-sectional survey.
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Thompson JR, Fu H, Saw RPM, Sherman KA, Beedle V, Atkinson V, Boyle F, O'Sullivan NA, Martin LK, and Bartula I
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Surveys and Questionnaires, Australia, Quality of Life psychology, Social Support, Health Services Needs and Demand, Caregivers psychology, Melanoma
- Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to investigate the supportive care needs of Australian melanoma patients and their caregivers to form the basis for improving services., Methods: General and melanoma-related supportive care needs in melanoma patients were measured using the SCNS-SF34 and SCNS-M12 respectively, whereas caregivers completed the SCNS-P&C. Patients also completed the MCQ-28 and FCRI-9, with all participants completing the QLQ-C30, DASS-21, and questions measuring utilisation and preference for supportive health services. Multivariable stepwise logistic regression was used to identify variables associated with unmet needs in melanoma patients., Results: A total of 56 early-stage patients, 100 advanced-stage patients, and 37 caregivers participated. At least three-quarters ([Formula: see text] 75%) of each participant group reported at least one unmet need. Of the ten most reported unmet needs in each participant group, at least six ([Formula: see text] 60%) were related to psychological and emotional well-being, with access to a psychologist the most desired service (> 25%). Fear of cancer recurrence was equally prevalent in both patient groups at a level indicative of need for intervention. Advanced-stage patients reported significantly (p < 0.05) more unmet psychological, physical and daily living, and sexuality needs, and significantly (p < 0.05) worse functioning than early-stage patients., Conclusion: Australian melanoma patients and caregivers report substantial unmet supportive care needs, particularly regarding their psychological and emotional well-being. Psychological and emotional well-being services, such as access to a clinical psychologist or implementation of patient-reported outcome measures, should be incorporated into routine melanoma care to address unmet patient and caregiver needs and improve well-being., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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5. Telehealth follow-up consultations for melanoma patients during the COVID-19 pandemic: Patient and clinician satisfaction.
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Al-Rikaby A, Sulaiman A, Thompson JR, Saw RPM, Boyle F, Taylor N, Carlino MS, Morton RL, Nieweg OE, Thompson JF, and Bartula I
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- Humans, Patient Satisfaction, Pandemics, Cross-Sectional Studies, Follow-Up Studies, Quality of Life, Australia epidemiology, Referral and Consultation, Personal Satisfaction, COVID-19 epidemiology, Melanoma epidemiology, Melanoma therapy, Telemedicine
- Abstract
Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic caused rapid implementation of telehealth for melanoma follow-up care in Australia. This study explores Australian melanoma patients and clinicians' level of satisfaction with telehealth., Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted across three specialist melanoma centres in Sydney, Australia. Melanoma patients (all stages) and clinicians completed mixed methods surveys seeking socio-demographic and clinical information and questionnaires to assess satisfaction with telehealth. Additionally, patients completed measures of quality of life, fear of cancer recurrence and trust in their oncologist. Patients and clinicians provided open-ended responses to qualitative questions about their perceptions of telehealth., Results: One hundred and fifteen patients and 13 clinicians responded to surveys. Telephone was used by 109 (95%) patients and 11 (85%) clinicians. Fifty-seven (50%) patients and nine (69%) clinicians preferred face-to-face consultations, 38 (33%) patients and 3 (23%) clinicians preferred a combination of face-to-face and telehealth consultations. Five (4%) patients and nil clinicians preferred telehealth consultations. Patients diagnosed with early-stage melanoma, using telehealth for the first time, who have lower trust in their oncologist, and having higher care delivery, communication and supportive care concerns were likely to report lower satisfaction with telehealth. Open-ended responses were consistent between patients and clinicians, who reported safety, convenience and improved access to care as major benefits, while identifying personal, interpersonal, clinical and system-related disadvantages., Discussion: While telehealth has been widely implemented during COVID-19, the benefits identified by patients and clinicians may extend past the pandemic. Telehealth may be considered for use in conjunction with face-to-face consultations to provide melanoma follow-up care., (© 2023 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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6. A systematic review with evidence mapping of supportive care interventions for melanoma patients and caregivers.
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Thompson JR, Salam RA, Hanna S, Dieng M, Saw RPM, and Bartula I
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- Humans, Psychosocial Support Systems, Bias, Caregivers psychology, Melanoma therapy
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Aim: We conducted a systematic review and evidence gap mapping to explore the existing supportive care interventions and their impact on well-being outcomes for melanoma patients and caregivers., Methods: We searched MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science Index Medicus, CINAHL, Lilacs, CENTRAL (Cochrane Library) and PsycINFO in December 2022, including interventional studies assessing the effectiveness of any supportive care intervention among melanoma patients and/or their caregivers., Findings: Twenty studies were included in this review. These studies consisted of randomised controlled trials (n = 11, 55%), pre-post studies (n = 7, 35%) and quasi-experimental trials (n = 2, 10%). All studies originated from high-income countries and focused primarily on melanoma patients, with no studies identified that focused solely on caregivers. Educational interventions were the most common (n = 7, 35%), followed by psychoeducational interventions (n = 6, 30%) and psychotherapeutic interventions (n = 4, 20%). Nearly all included studies (n = 18, 90%) reported a positive effect of the intervention on the primary outcome of interest; however, most studies (n = 17, 85%) were judged to be at moderate or high risk of bias. Due to heterogeneity of study designs, intervention characteristics and outcome measures, meta-analysis was not conducted., Implications: Supportive care interventions have positive impacts on melanoma patient well-being outcomes, while being acceptable and feasible to conduct. More research is needed regarding supportive care interventions for melanoma caregivers. Future research should focus on eliminating sources of bias through rigorous methodology, with the development of standardised outcome measures for psychosocial outcomes to facilitate future meta-analyses., (© 2023 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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7. Health-related quality of life in patients with melanoma brain metastases treated with immunotherapy.
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Thompson JR, Lai-Kwon J, Morton RL, Guminski AD, Gonzalez M, Atkinson V, Sandhu S, Brown MP, Menzies AM, McArthur GA, Lo SN, Long GV, and Bartula I
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- Humans, Nivolumab adverse effects, Ipilimumab adverse effects, Quality of Life, Immunotherapy, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Melanoma drug therapy, Melanoma pathology, Brain Neoplasms drug therapy, Brain Neoplasms etiology
- Abstract
Aims: To describe the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of melanoma brain metastasis (MBM) patients throughout the first 18 weeks of ipilimumab-nivolumab or nivolumab treatment. Materials & methods: HRQoL data (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer's Core Quality of Life Questionnaire, additional Brain Neoplasm Module, and EuroQol 5-Dimension 5-Level Questionnaire) were collected as a secondary outcome of the Anti-PD1 Brain Collaboration phase II trial. Mixed linear modeling assessed changes over time, whereas the Kaplan-Meier method was used to determine median time to first deterioration. Results: Asymptomatic MBM patients treated with ipilimumab-nivolumab (n = 33) or nivolumab (n = 24) maintained baseline HRQoL. MBM patients with symptoms or leptomeningeal/progressive disease treated with nivolumab (n = 14) reported a statistically significant trend toward improvement. Conclusion: MBM patients treated with either ipilimumab-nivolumab or nivolumab did not report a significant deterioration in HRQoL within 18 weeks of treatment initiation. Clinical trial registration : NCT02374242 (ClinicalTrials.gov).
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- 2023
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8. Longitudinal trajectory of quality of life for patients with melanoma brain metastases: A secondary analysis from a whole brain radiotherapy randomized clinical trial.
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Bartula I, Tran AD, Nowak AK, Ahmed T, Morton RL, Burmeister BH, Dolven-Jacobsen K, Nobes J, Thompson JF, Fogarty GB, Lo SN, and Hong AM
- Abstract
Purpose: Brain metastases are common in patients with advanced melanoma. This study describes 12-month quality of life (QoL) trajectories following local management of 1-3 melanoma brain metastases., Methods: This study assessed QoL data collected during a multi-center, prospective, open-label, phase III randomized controlled trial comparing the efficacy of adjuvant whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT) with observation after local treatment of 1-3 melanoma brain metastases. Patients completed the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Core (QLQ-C30) and Brain Tumour (BN-20) questionnaires at baseline and every 2 months, for 12 months.Using growth mixture modelling, QoL trajectories were identified for global health status, QLQ-C30 and BN-20 subscales for patients with baseline and at least one follow-up assessment. Multivariable logistic regression was used to examine associations between trajectories, demographic, and clinical factors., Results: After combining QoL data from observation and WBRT arms, QLQ-C30 and BN-20 trajectories were calculated for 139 and 137 patients respectively. Depending on the QoL domain, 9-54 % of patients reported a deterioration in QoL. Older age (≥65 years) was significantly associated with deterioration in global health status (OR = 2.88, 95 %CI = 1.27-6.54), physical (OR = 3.49, 95 %CI = 1.29-9.41), role (OR = 4.15, 95 %CI = 1.77-9.71), social (OR = 4.42, 95 % CI = 1.57-12.46), cognitive (OR = 6.70, 95 % CI = 1.93-23.29) and motor functioning (OR = 4.95, 95 %CI = 1.95-12.61) and increased future uncertainty (OR = 0.20, 95 %CI = 0.07-0.53). Female sex (OR = 0.10, 95 %CI = 0.02-0.41), not having neurosurgery at baseline (OR = 0.09, 95 %CI = 0.02-0.52), 2-3 brain metastases (OR = 5.75, 95 %CI = 1.76-18.85) or receiving adjuvant WBRT (OR = 6.77, 95 %CI = 2.00-22.99) were associated with poorer physical, emotional, cognitive and social outcomes respectively., Conclusions: Poorer QoL outcomes in the first 12 months after diagnosis of melanoma brain metastases were observed in patients aged ≥ 65 years, females, having 2-3 brain metastases, non-surgical treatment of metastases or adjuvant WBRT.Clinical Trial Registration Number:Whole Brain Radiotherapy Trial (WBRTMel) was registered with the Australian Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12607000512426) and ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01503827).Study Support:This project was funded by Cancer Australia PdCCRS (Grants No. 512358, 1009485, and 1084046) and the National Helath and Medical Research Coucil of Australia (NHMRC; Grant No. 1135285).ADT was supported by a Cancer Australia Priority-driven Collaborative Cancer Research Scheme. Project #1046923. RLM was supported by an NHMRC Fellowship #1194703 and a University of Sydney, Robinson Fellowship. JFT was supported by an NHMRC Program Grant #1093017., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Anna K Nowak reports financial support was provided by Astra Zeneca and Douglas Pharmaceuticals Ltd. Anna K Nowak reports a relationship with Boehringer Ingelheim and Astra Zaneca that includes: travel reimbursement. Anna K Nowak reports a relationship with Bayer Pharmaceuticals, Roche Pharmaceuticals, Boehringer Ingelheim, Merck Sharp and Dohme, Douglas Pharmaceuticals Ltd, PharmAbcine Inc, Atara Biotherapeutics, Triezell Ltd and Astra Zaneca that includes: consulting or advisory. Anna K Nowak reports a relationship with Bristol Myers Squibb that includes: speaking and lecture fees. John F Thompson reports a relationship with Bristol-Myers Squibb Australia, Merck Sharp and Dohme Australia, Provectus Inc and GlaxoSmithKline Australia Pty Ltd that includes: consulting or advisory. John F Thompson reports a relationship with GlaxoSmithKline Australia Pty Ltd, Provectus Inc and Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation that includes: travel reimbursement. Honoraria - BMS Australia, MSD Australia, Provectus Inc, GSK Australia - JFT Honoraria - Qbiotics, Oncobeta - AMH, (© 2023 The Authors.)
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- 2023
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9. Embedding electronic patient-reported outcome measures into routine care for patients with stage III MELanoma (ePROMs-MEL): protocol for a prospective, longitudinal, mixed-methods pilot study.
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Dempsey K, Saw R, Bartula I, Lo S, Lawn C, Pennington T, Spillane A, Boyle F, Dong S, Dieng M, Milne D, Seaman L, Saks D, Lai-Kwon J, Thompson JR, and Morton R
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- Humans, Pilot Projects, Prospective Studies, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Quality of Life, Melanoma therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: The benefits of patient-reported feedback, using questionnaires that allow patients to report how they feel and function without any interpretation from healthcare professionals, are well established. However, patient-reported outcomes measures (PROMs) are not routinely collected in patients with melanoma in Australia. The aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of implementing electronic PROMs (ePROMs) into routine care from the perspectives of patients with stage III melanoma and their treating clinical team., Methods and Analysis: A minimum of 50 patients and 5 clinicians will be recruited to this prospective, longitudinal pilot study (ePROMs-MELanoma). The study uses a mixed-methods approach (quantitative PROMs questionnaires and end-of-study surveys with qualitative interviews) and commenced in May 2021 in surgical and medical melanoma clinics at two sites in metropolitan Sydney, Australia. The primary outcomes are measures of feasibility and acceptability, comprising descriptive questionnaire completion statistics, and proportion of patients who reported that these PROMs were easy to complete and measured items they considered important. Clinician and clinic staff views will be canvassed on the appropriateness of these PROMs for their patients, change in referral practice and uptake and incorporation into routine practice. Secondary aims include measurement of improvements in patients' emotional and physical health and well-being, and utility of real-time data capture and clinician feedback. All participants will complete the Distress Thermometer and EQ-5D-5L questionnaires in the clinic using a tablet computer at baseline and two to three subsequent follow-up appointments. Participants who report a score of 4 or higher on the Distress Thermometer will be triaged to complete an additional three questionnaires: the QLQ-C30, Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale and Melanoma Concerns Questionnaire-28. Results will be generated in real time; patients with psychosocial distress or poor quality of life will discuss possible referral to appropriate allied health services with their clinician. Thematic analysis of interviews will be conducted., Ethics and Dissemination: Ethics approval obtained from St Vincent's Hospital Human Research Ethics Committee on 19 September 2019 (2019/ETH10558), with amendments approved on 8 June 2022. Patient consent is obtained electronically prior to questionnaire commencement. Dissemination strategies will include publication in peer-reviewed journals and presentation at international conferences, tailored presentations for clinical societies and government bodies, organisational reporting through multidisciplinary meetings and research symposia for local clinicians and clinic staff, and more informal, lay reports and presentations for consumer melanoma representative bodies and patient participants and their families., Trial Registration Number: ACTRN12620001149954., Competing Interests: Competing interests: RS has received honoraria for advisory board participation from Merck Sharp & Dohme (MSD), Novartis and Qbiotics and speaking honoraria from Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS). All other authors declare no competing interests., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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10. Feasibility, acceptability, and utility of a nurse-led survivorship program for people with metastatic melanoma (MELCARE).
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Lai-Kwon J, Kelly B, Lane S, Biviano R, Bartula I, Brennan F, Kivikoski I, Thompson J, Dhillon HM, Menzies A, and Long GV
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- Male, Humans, Female, Survivorship, Feasibility Studies, Nurse's Role, Surveys and Questionnaires, Melanoma drug therapy, Neoplasms, Second Primary
- Abstract
Purpose: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) and targeted therapy (TT) have improved the survival of people with metastatic melanoma. We assessed the feasibility, acceptability, and utility of a novel model of nurse-led, telehealth-delivered survivorship care (MELCARE) for this survivor group., Methods: People ≥ 18 years diagnosed with unresectable stage III or stage IV melanoma who were ≥ 6 months post initiation of ICI/TT with a radiological response suggestive of a long-term response to ICI/TT were recruited from a specialist melanoma centre in Australia. All participants received MELCARE, a nurse-led survivorship program involving two telehealth consultations 3 months apart, needs assessment using the Distress Thermometer (DT) and Problem List, and creation of a survivorship care plan. Feasibility, acceptability, and utility were assessed using rates of consent and study completion, time taken to complete each component of MELCARE, the Acceptability of Intervention Measure (AIM), and a customised utility survey., Results: 31/54 (57%) people consented. Participants were male (21, 68%), with a median age of 67 (range: 46-82). Eleven (35%) were receiving/had received ipilimumab and nivolumab and 27 (87%) had ceased treatment. Feasibility was demonstrated with 97% completing MELCARE. Utility was demonstrated on a customised survey and supported by a reduction in the mean DT score (initial: 5.6, SD: 2.9; follow-up: 1.5, SD: 1.2). Acceptability was demonstrated on 3/4 AIM items., Conclusion: MELCARE was feasible and acceptable with high levels of utility. However, the consent rate was 57% indicating some people do not require support. Future studies should consider MELCARE's optimal timing, resourcing, and cost-effectiveness., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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11. Protocol for the implementation of a stepped-care model to address fear of cancer recurrence in patients previously diagnosed with early-stage (0-II) melanoma.
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Thompson JR, Smith AL, Lo SN, Kasparian NA, Saw RP, Dieng M, Seaman L, Martin LK, Guitera P, Milne D, Schmid H, Cust AE, and Bartula I
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- Fear psychology, Humans, Quality of Life, Melanoma, Cutaneous Malignant, Melanoma psychology, Melanoma therapy, Skin Neoplasms psychology, Skin Neoplasms therapy
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Introduction: Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is commonly reported by patients diagnosed with early-stage (0-II) melanoma and can have a significant impact on daily functioning. This study will pilot the implementation of the Melanoma Care Program, an evidence-based, psychological intervention to reduce FCR, into routine practice, using a stepped-care model., Methods and Analysis: Intervention effectiveness and level of implementation will be investigated using a hybrid type I design. Between 4 weeks before and 1 week after their next dermatological appointment, patients with melanoma will be invited to complete the Fear of Cancer Recurrence Inventory Short-Form, measuring self-reported FCR severity. Using a stepped-care model, clinical cut-off points will guide the level of support offered to patients. This includes: (1) usual care, (2) Melanoma: Questions and Answers psychoeducational booklet, and (3) three or five psychotherapeutic telehealth sessions. This longitudinal, mixed-methods pilot implementation study aims to recruit 108 patients previously diagnosed with stage 0-II melanoma. The primary effectiveness outcome is change in FCR severity over time. Secondary effectiveness outcomes include change in anxiety, depression, stress, health-related quality of life and melanoma-related knowledge over time. All outcomes are measured at baseline, within 1 week of the final telehealth session, and 6 and 12 months post-intervention. Implementation stakeholders at each study site and interested patients will provide feedback on intervention acceptability and appropriateness. Implementation stakeholders will also provide feedback on intervention cost, feasibility, fidelity and sustainability. These outcomes will be measured throughout implementation, using questionnaires and semistructured interviews/expert group discussions. Descriptive statistics, linear mixed-effects regression and thematic analysis will be used to analyse study data., Ethics and Dissemination: Ethics approval was granted by the Sydney Local Health District-Royal Prince Alfred Zone (2020/ETH02518), protocol number: X20-0495. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals, conference presentations, social media and result summaries distributed to interested participants. TRIAL REGISTRATION DETAILS: (ACTRN12621000145808)., Competing Interests: Competing interests: RS has received honoraria for advisory board participation from MSD, Novartis and QBiotics, and speaking honoraria from BMS. DM has received honoraria for advisory board participation from MSD, BMS and Novartis, and speaking honoraria from BMS and MSD., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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12. To be mortal is human: professional consensus around the need for more psychology in palliative care.
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Sansom-Daly UM, Lobb EA, Evans HE, Breen LJ, Ugalde A, Best M, Zomerdijk N, Beasley EA, Taylor KL, Clayton J, Sharpe L, Bartula I, and Olver I
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- Communication, Consensus, Humans, Palliative Care psychology, Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing, Terminal Care psychology
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
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- 2021
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13. The Female Sexual Functioning Index (FSFI): evaluation of acceptability, reliability, and validity in women with breast cancer.
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Bartula I and Sherman KA
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- Breast Neoplasms physiopathology, Carcinoma in Situ physiopathology, Carcinoma in Situ psychology, Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast physiopathology, Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast psychology, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Motivation, Psychometrics standards, Reproducibility of Results, Sexual Dysfunctions, Psychological psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Breast Neoplasms psychology, Psychometrics methods, Sexual Dysfunctions, Psychological diagnosis
- Abstract
Purpose: Sexual dysfunction commonly arises for women following diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer. The aim of this study was to systematically evaluate the acceptability, reliability, and validity of the Female Sexual Functioning Index (FSFI) when used with these women., Methods: Sexually active women previously diagnosed with breast cancer (N = 399) completed an online questionnaire including the FSFI and measures of acceptability (ease of use, relevance), sexual functioning, body image, fatigue, impact of cancer, physical and mental health, and relationship adjustment. Reliability and validity were evaluated using standard scale validation techniques., Results: Participants indicated a high degree of acceptability. Excellent internal consistency (α = 0.83-0.96) and test-retest reliability (r = 0.74-0.86) of the FSFI were evident. According to the confirmatory factor analysis, the best fit was achieved with removal of item 14 (regarding the extent of emotional closeness with the partner) and six subscales (desire, arousal, lubrication, orgasm, satisfaction, pain), without a total score (TLI = 0.96, CFI = 0.97, RMSEA = 0.07). Correlations with measures of sexual functioning and related constructs provided evidence for convergent and divergent validities, respectively. All but one subscale (orgasm) discriminated between women who are, and are not, currently receiving treatment for breast cancer (discriminant validity)., Conclusions: These findings indicate that not only is the FSFI psychometrically sound when used with women with breast cancer, but it is perceived as being easy to use and relevant. It is recommended that the FSFI subscale scores can be used in both clinical and research settings as a screening tool to identify women experiencing sexual dysfunction following breast cancer.
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- 2015
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14. Development and validation of the Female Sexual Function Index adaptation for breast cancer patients (FSFI-BC).
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Bartula I and Sherman KA
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- Body Image, Breast Neoplasms physiopathology, Fatigue etiology, Female, Humans, Lubricants therapeutic use, Middle Aged, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Psychometrics methods, Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological drug therapy, Sexual Dysfunctions, Psychological etiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Breast Neoplasms complications, Breast Neoplasms psychology, Sexual Behavior, Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological etiology
- Abstract
Sexual dysfunction following breast cancer treatment is common and screening for this is recommended. This study determined the reliability, validity, and acceptability of a breast cancer-specific adaptation of the Female Sexual Function Index, the FSFI-BC. This new measure addresses limitations in the FSFI when assessing sexual dysfunction of women with breast cancer regarding applicability to non-sexually active women, measuring distress and changes after cancer. Female breast cancer survivors (n = 596; 429 sexually active, 166 non-sexually active) completed an online survey including demographic/medical information, the FSFI-BC, and scales measuring sexual functioning, fatigue, body image, physical and mental health, and relationship adjustment (Time 1). Three weeks later, 326 women (245 sexually active; 81 non-sexually active) completed the Time 2 survey including the FSFI-BC, and questions regarding its acceptability and perceived change in sexual functioning. Reliability, construct validity, and acceptability were examined using standard scale validation techniques. Exploratory factor analysis delineated seven factors: Changes after cancer, desire/arousal, lubrication, orgasm, pain, satisfaction, and distress, accounting for 79.98 % (sexually active) and 77.19 % (non-active) variance in responses. Acceptable internal consistencies (non-active: α = 0.71-0.96; sexually active: α = 0.89-0.96) and test-retest reliabilities (non-active: r = 0.63-0.86; sexually active: r = 0.71-0.88) were evident. Inter-scale correlations provided evidence for convergent and divergent validities of the FSFI-BC. Both sexually active and non-active women provided positive feedback about the FSFI-BC. The optional partner questions demonstrated clinical utility. With desirable psychometric properties and acceptability to participants, the FSFI-BC is suitable for screening for sexual dysfunction in women with breast cancer.
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- 2015
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15. Screening for sexual dysfunction in women diagnosed with breast cancer: systematic review and recommendations.
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Bartula I and Sherman KA
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- Female, Humans, Psychometrics, Quality of Life, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Breast Neoplasms complications, Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological diagnosis, Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological etiology
- Abstract
Breast cancer patients are at increased risk of sexual dysfunction. Despite this, both patients and practitioners are reluctant to initiate a conversation about sexuality. A sexual dysfunction screening tool would be helpful in clinical practice and research, however, no scale has yet been identified as a "gold standard" for this purpose. The present review aimed at evaluating the scales used in breast cancer research in respect to their psychometric properties and the extent to which they measure the DSM-5/ICD-10 aspects of sexual dysfunction. A comprehensive search of the literature was conducted for the period 1992-2013, yielding 129 studies using 30 different scales measuring sexual functioning, that were evaluated in the present review. Three scales (Arizona Sexual Experience Scale, Female Sexual Functioning Index, and Sexual Problems Scale) were identified as most closely meeting criteria for acceptable psychometric properties and incorporation of the DSM-5/ICD-10 areas of sexual dysfunction. Clinical implications for implementation of these measures are discussed as well as directions for further research.
- Published
- 2013
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