15 results on '"Kissane D"'
Search Results
2. The relationship between demoralization and depressive symptoms among patients from the general hospital: network and exploratory graph analysis.
- Author
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Belvederi Murri M, Caruso R, Ounalli H, Zerbinati L, Berretti E, Costa S, Recla E, Folesani F, Kissane D, Nanni MG, and Grassi L
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Demoralization, Hospitals, General, Humans, Italy, Stress, Psychological, Depression epidemiology, Neoplasms
- Abstract
Introduction: Depression and demoralization are highly prevalent among individuals with physical illnesses but their relationship is still unclear., Objective: To examine the relationship between clinical features of depression and demoralization with the network approach to psychopathology., Methods: Participants were recruited from the medical wards of a University Hospital in Italy. The Demoralization Scale (DS) was used to assess demoralization, while the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) to assess depressive symptoms. The structure of the depression-demoralization symptom network was examined and complemented by the analysis of topological overlap and Exploratory Graph Analysis (EGA) to identify the most relevant groupings (communities) of symptoms and their connections. The stability of network models was estimated with bootstrap procedures and results were compared with factor analysis., Results: Life feeling pointless, low mood/discouragement, hopelessness and feeling trapped were among the most central features of the network. EGA identified four communities: (1) Neurovegetative Depression, (2) Loss of purpose, (3) Frustrated Isolation and (4) Low mood and morale. Loss of purpose and low mood/morale were largely connected with other communities through anhedonia, hopelessness and items related to isolation and lack of emotional control. Results from EGA displayed good stability and were comparable to those from factor analysis., Limitations: Cross-sectional design; sample heterogeneity CONCLUSIONS: Among general hospital inpatients, features of depression and demoralization are independent, with the exception of low mood and self-reproach. The identification of symptom groupings around entrapment and helplessness may provide a basis for a dimensional characterization of depressed/demoralized patients, with possible implications for treatment., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2020
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3. Relationship of demoralization with anxiety, depression, and quality of life: A Southern European study of Italian and Portuguese cancer patients.
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Nanni MG, Caruso R, Travado L, Ventura C, Palma A, Berardi AM, Meggiolaro E, Ruffilli F, Martins C, Kissane D, and Grassi L
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- Adult, Aged, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression diagnosis, Depression epidemiology, Female, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms epidemiology, Portugal epidemiology, Prevalence, Psychometrics, Sensitivity and Specificity, Suicidal Ideation, Surveys and Questionnaires, Anxiety psychology, Depression psychology, Morale, Neoplasms psychology, Quality of Life psychology, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
Background: Demoralization syndrome is a significant condition that has not been greatly studied in Southern European countries., Aims: To extend the knowledge of demoralization in Southern Europe by examining its prevalence according to different methods of assessment, its relationship with anxiety and depression, and its impact on quality of life (QoL) among cancer patients., Methods: A convenience sample of 195 cancer outpatients from two oncology centers (102 from Lisbon, Portugal, and 93 from Ferrara, Italy) participated in an observational, cross-sectional study using the Diagnostic Criteria of Psychosomatic Research-Demoralization interview (DCPR/D) and psychometric tools (Demoralization scale-DS; Patient Health Questionnaire-9/PHQ-9; Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale-HADS; and European Quality of Life-5-EQ-5D)., Results: A 25.1% prevalence (CI 95%, 0.19-0.31) of clinically relevant demoralization was reported on the DCPR/D interview. A total demoralization score cutoff score ≥ 25 maximized sensitivity (81.6%), and specificity (72.6%) in identifying DCPR/D demoralized patients. The DCPR/D and DS were associated with poorer levels of QoL. About half of the patients who were demoralized were not clinically depressed (PHQ-9). Self-reported suicidal ideation (PHQ-9 item 9) was found in a minority of patients (8.2%), most of whom (77%) were cases of depression (PHQ-9), but one-quarter (23%) were not depressed, yet moderately/severely demoralized (DCPR/D and DS)., Conclusions: This Southern European study confirms the importance of demoralization in cancer patients as a different condition with respect to depression and its relationship with poor QoL and suicidal ideation., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2018
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4. Traumatic exposure, acculturative stress and cultural orientation: the influence on PTSD, depressive and anxiety symptoms among refugees.
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Kartal D, Alkemade N, Eisenbruch M, and Kissane D
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Australia, Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Health, Mental Health Services, Middle Aged, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Prevalence, Stress, Psychological, Symptom Assessment, Young Adult, Acculturation, Anxiety ethnology, Anxiety etiology, Depression ethnology, Depression etiology, Refugees, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ethnology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic etiology
- Abstract
Objective: Acculturation studies conducted with refugees have predominantly concentrated on investigating the impact of acculturative stress on mental health, and have neglected to investigate the impact of cultural orientations towards the host and ethnic cultures. Furthermore, exposure to traumas is highly prevalent in refugees and strongly associated with mental health outcomes, however, rarely included in investigations of acculturative process of refugees., Method: Using structural equation modelling, this study tested an integrated model of the relationship between traumatic exposure, acculturative stress, host and ethnic cultural orientations and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression and anxiety symptoms among 138 Bosnian refugees resettled in Australia and Austria., Results: The model showed an overall good fit and noteworthy amount of variance indicating that traumatic exposure is the strongest direct and indirect predictor of PTSD, depression and anxiety symptoms. Furthermore, acculturative stress was identified as a significant risk factor influencing host cultural orientation, mediating the effect of traumatic exposure on all mental health outcomes., Conclusion: Acculturative stress and cultural and social stressors that are related to acculturation need to be addressed alongside provision of effective psychotherapy, especially since they are significant impediments to host cultural orientation and constructive engagement with mental health services in refugees.
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- 2018
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5. The factor structure and use of the Demoralization Scale (DS-IT) in Italian cancer patients.
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Grassi L, Costantini A, Kissane D, Brunetti S, Caruso R, Piazza G, Marchetti P, Sabato S, and Nanni MG
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- Adult, Depression etiology, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms ethnology, Neoplasms psychology, Outpatients, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Stress, Psychological complications, Stress, Psychological psychology, Adaptation, Psychological, Depression psychology, Language, Neoplasms complications, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
- Abstract
Objective: Demoralization is a commonly observed syndrome in cancer patients, deserving to be carefully assessed in cross-cultural contexts., Aims: To examine the factor structure and concurrent and divergent validity of the Italian version of the Demoralization Scale (DS-IT) in cancer patients., Methods: The sample included 194 Italian cancer outpatients who were assessed by using the DS-IT and the Diagnostic Criteria of Psychosomatic Research-Demoralization module to examine demoralization. The Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) to explore depression and the Mini-Mental Adjustment-to-Cancer-Hopelessness/Helplessness scale (Mini-MAC-HH) to explore maladaptive coping were also administered., Results: Four factors were extracted by exploratory factor analysis on the DS-IT (disheartenment, α = .87; sense of failure, α = .77; dysphoria, α = .73; loss of meaning/purpose, α = .72; total = 0.91), accounting for 57.1% of the variance. The DS-IT factors shared between 17% and 36% of the variance. Patients reporting a diagnosis of demoralization on the Diagnostic Criteria of Psychosomatic Research-Demoralization module (23.7%) had higher scores on DS-IT loss of meaning/purpose, sense of failure, dysphoria, and DS-IT total. About half of those who were highly demoralized were not depressed and among those who had moderate or moderately severe demoralization, about 80% were not depressed on the PHQ-9. The DS-IT was significantly associated with PHQ-9 and Mini-MAC-HH., Conclusions: The study presents further evidence that demoralization is a significant clinical condition and that the DS-IT demonstrates satisfactory levels of validity and reliability to support its use in patients in the ambulatory cancer setting., (Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2017
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6. Group-based trajectory modeling of fear of disease recurrence among women recently diagnosed with gynecological cancers.
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Manne SL, Myers-Virtue S, Kissane D, Ozga ML, Kashy DA, Rubin SC, Rosenblum NG, and Heckman CJ
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- Adult, Aged, Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial, Depressive Disorder psychology, Female, Genital Neoplasms, Female pathology, Humans, Middle Aged, Neoplasms, Glandular and Epithelial diagnosis, Neoplasms, Glandular and Epithelial pathology, Neoplasms, Glandular and Epithelial psychology, Ovarian Neoplasms diagnosis, Ovarian Neoplasms pathology, Ovarian Neoplasms psychology, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Social Support, Time, Adaptation, Psychological, Anxiety psychology, Depression psychology, Fear psychology, Genital Neoplasms, Female diagnosis, Genital Neoplasms, Female psychology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Fear of cancer recurrence is an important clinical phenomenon and is associated with decrements in life domains. The study goals were to characterize patterns of global fear of recurrence (FOR) and 4 domains of fear (health, role, womanhood, and death worry) over time in women who were diagnosed with gynecological cancer and to identify demographic, medical, and psychological predictors of FOR., Method: One hundred eighteen women participating in the usual care arm of a randomized trial completed the Concerns about Recurrence scale as well as measures of depressive symptoms, cancer-specific distress, coping, coping efficacy, and social network responses at 4 time points. The majority of the sample was diagnosed with stage 3 ovarian cancer., Results: Group-based trajectory modeling identified subgroups of women with high-stable (49.1%), high-decreasing (25.3%), and low-stable (25.5%) trajectories for global FOR. For role worries, 3 similar group trajectories were identified. For health worries, modeling identified subgroups with high-decreasing (19.1%) and low-increasing (80.9%) trajectories. For womanhood worries, modeling identified subgroups with high-increasing (15.7%) and low-decreasing (84.2%) trajectories. Young age, metastatic cancer, depression, cancer distress, holding back, and lower coping efficacy were associated with the high-stable global FOR and at least 1 domain of FOR., Conclusion: Almost half of the women recently diagnosed with gynecological cancer evidence persistently elevated FOR over the 6-month period postdiagnosis. Psychological interventions to reduce FOR may be more effective if they focus on teaching patients coping skills, as well as greater comfort expressing cancer-specific concerns to others., (Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2017
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7. Individualised mindfulness-based stress reduction for head and neck cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy of curative intent: a descriptive pilot study.
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Pollard A, Burchell JL, Castle D, Neilson K, Ftanou M, Corry J, Rischin D, Kissane DW, Krishnasamy M, Carlson LE, and Couper J
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- Adult, Aged, Anxiety psychology, Australia, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell psychology, Depression psychology, Female, Head and Neck Neoplasms psychology, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Quality of Life psychology, Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck, Stress, Psychological psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Anxiety therapy, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell radiotherapy, Depression therapy, Head and Neck Neoplasms radiotherapy, Mindfulness methods, Stress, Psychological therapy
- Abstract
People with head and neck cancer (HNC) experience elevated symptom toxicity and co-morbidity as a result of treatment, which is associated with poorer psychosocial and quality-of-life (QoL) outcomes. This Phase I study examined whether an individualised mindfulness-based stress reduction (IMBSR) programme could be successfully used with HNC patients undergoing curative treatment. Primary aims were to explore feasibility, compliance, acceptability and fidelity. Secondary aims were to determine whether (1) participation in the intervention was associated with changes in post-intervention mindfulness and (2) post-intervention mindfulness was associated with post-intervention distress and QoL. Nineteen HNC patients participated in a seven-session IMBSR programme with pre- and post-test outcome measures of psychological distress, depression, anxiety and QoL. Primary aims were assessed by therapists or participants. Mindfulness, distress and QoL were assessed using self-report questionnaires at pre- and post-intervention. Longer time spent meditating daily was associated with higher post-intervention mindfulness. After controlling for pre-intervention mindfulness, there was an association between higher post-intervention mindfulness and lower psychological distress and higher total, social and emotional QoL. This study offers important preliminary evidence than an IMBSR intervention can be administered to HNC patients during active cancer treatment. A randomised controlled trial is warranted to confirm these findings., (© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2017
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8. Quality of life trajectories after diagnosis of gynecologic cancer: a theoretically based approach.
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Gonzalez BD, Manne SL, Stapleton J, Myers-Virtue S, Ozga M, Kissane D, Heckman C, and Morgan M
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- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Depression psychology, Genital Neoplasms, Female psychology, Quality of Life psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: The course of quality of life after diagnosis of gynecologic cancer is not well understood. We aimed to identify subgroups of gynecologic cancer patients with distinct trajectories of quality of life outcomes in the 18-month period after diagnosis. We also aimed to determine whether these subgroups could be distinguished by predictors derived from Social-Cognitive Processing Theory., Methods: Gynecologic cancer patients randomized to usual care as part of a psychological intervention trial (NCT01951807) reported on depressed mood, quality of life, and physical impairment soon after diagnosis and at five additional assessments ending 18 months after baseline. Clinical, demographic, and psychosocial predictors were assessed at baseline, and additional clinical factors were assessed between 6 and 18 months after baseline., Results: A two-group growth mixture model provided the best and most interpretable fit to the data for all three outcomes. One class revealed subclinical and improving scores for mood, quality of life, and physical function across 18 months. A second class represented approximately 12 % of patients with persisting depression, diminished quality of life, and greater physical disability. Membership of this high-risk subgroup was associated with holding back concerns, more intrusive thoughts, and use of pain medications at the baseline assessment (ps < .05)., Conclusions: Trajectories of quality of life outcomes were identified in the 18-month period after diagnosis of gynecologic cancer. Potentially modifiable psychosocial risk factors were identified that can have implications for preventing quality of life disruptions and treating impaired quality of life in future research., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest. All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.
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- 2017
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9. A systematic review and meta-analysis of prescribing practices of antidepressants in cancer patients.
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Sanjida S, Janda M, Kissane D, Shaw J, Pearson SA, DiSipio T, and Couper J
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- Adult, Depression diagnosis, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Drug Prescriptions, Humans, Prospective Studies, Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors therapeutic use, Antidepressive Agents therapeutic use, Depression drug therapy, Depressive Disorder drug therapy, Neoplasms psychology, Practice Patterns, Physicians' statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Antidepressants are commonly used for the pharmacological treatment of depression. We aimed to summarise the prevalence of antidepressant prescription to cancer patients, and differences by study or patient characteristics., Methods: PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Scopus and psychINFO were searched using keywords 'psychotropic', 'antidepressants', 'prescription' and 'cancer'. Prevalence of antidepressants, type, dose and follow-up of antidepressants and prescriber details were extracted., Results: Overall, 1537 articles between 1979 and February 2015 were found, 38 met the inclusion criteria and were reviewed according to PRISMA guidelines. The prevalence rate of prescribing antidepressants to cancer patients was 15.6% (95% CI = 13.3-18.3). Prescription was significantly less common in studies from Asia (7.4%; 95% CI = 4.3-12.5), more common in female (22.6%; 95% CI = 16.0-31.0) or breast cancer patients (22.6%; 95% CI = 16.0-30.9). Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors were the most frequently prescribed antidepressants. General practitioners and psychiatrists, followed by oncologists, were identified as the major providers of antidepressant prescriptions to cancer patients. Few studies reported the exact dose, length of time drugs were prescribed for or follow-up regimens., Conclusions: There is considerable variation in the prescribing patterns of antidepressants across the world, with few studies reporting robust data on exact dose or follow-up regimens. Prospective studies that monitor antidepressant prescribing, including details of reasons for prescribing and the healthcare providers involved, dose, change in dose or type of medication and follow-up are needed to ascertain whether patients are being treated optimally and if side effects or drug-drug interactions are identified and managed. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., (Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2016
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10. Holding back sharing concerns, dispositional emotional expressivity, perceived unsupportive responses and distress among women newly diagnosed with gynecological cancers.
- Author
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Manne S, Myers S, Ozga M, Kissane D, Kashy D, Rubin S, Heckman C, and Rosenblum N
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Quality of Life psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Adaptation, Psychological, Depression psychology, Disclosure, Genital Neoplasms, Female psychology, Social Support
- Abstract
Objective: Little attention has been paid to the role of holding back sharing concerns in the psychological adaptation of women newly diagnosed with gynecological cancers. The goal of the present study was to evaluate the role of holding back concerns in psychosocial adjustment and quality of life, as well as a possible moderating role for emotional expressivity and perceived unsupportive responses from family and friends., Method: Two hundred forty-four women diagnosed with gynecological cancer in the past 8 months completed measures of holding back, dispositional emotional expressivity, perceived unsupportive responses from family and friends, cancer-specific distress, depressive symptoms and quality of life., Results: Emotional expressivity moderated the association between holding back and cancer-specific distress and quality of life, but not depressive symptoms. Greater holding back was more strongly associated with higher levels of cancer-related distress among women who were more emotionally expressive than among women who were less expressive. Perceived unsupportive responses did not moderate the associations between holding back and psychosocial outcomes., Conclusion: Holding back sharing concerns was more common in this patient population than other cancer populations. Dispositional expressivity played a role in how harmful holding back concerns was for women, while unsupportive responses from family and friends did not., (© 2014.)
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- 2014
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11. Cancer-related communication, relationship intimacy, and psychological distress among couples coping with localized prostate cancer.
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Manne S, Badr H, Zaider T, Nelson C, and Kissane D
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- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Quality of Life, Adaptation, Psychological, Communication, Depression psychology, Interpersonal Relations, Prostatic Neoplasms psychology, Stress, Psychological
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Introduction: The present study evaluated intimacy as a mechanism for the effects of relationship-enhancing (self-disclosure, mutual constructive communication) and relationship-compromising communication (holding back, mutual avoidance, and demand-withdraw communication) on couples' psychological distress., Methods: Seventy-five men diagnosed with localized prostate cancer in the past year and their partners completed surveys about communication, intimacy, and distress., Results: Multi-level models with the couple as unit of analyses indicated that the association between mutual constructive communication, mutual avoidance, and patient demand-partner withdraw and distress could be accounted for by their influence on relationship intimacy. Intimacy did not mediate associations between self-disclosure, holding back, and partner demand-patient withdraw communication and distress., Discussion/conclusions: These findings indicate that the way in which couples talk about cancer-related concerns as well as the degree to which one or both partners avoid talking about cancer-related concerns can either facilitate or reduce relationship intimacy, and that it is largely by this mechanism that these three communication strategies impact psychological distress., Implications for Cancer Survivors: Relationship intimacy and how patients and partners communicate to achieve this intimacy is important for the psychological adjustment of early stage prostate cancer survivors and their partners.
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- 2010
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12. Identifying and responding to depression in adult cancer patients: evaluating the efficacy of a pilot communication skills training program for oncology nurses.
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Brown RF, Bylund CL, Kline N, De La Cruz A, Solan J, Kelvin J, Gueguen J, Eddington J, Kissane D, and Passik S
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- Adult, Attitude of Health Personnel, Chi-Square Distribution, Depression diagnosis, Depression etiology, Depression psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Educational, Models, Nursing, Neoplasms complications, New York City, Nurse-Patient Relations, Nursing Assessment, Nursing Education Research, Nursing Staff, Hospital education, Nursing Staff, Hospital psychology, Oncology Nursing methods, Pilot Projects, Program Evaluation, Self Efficacy, Clinical Competence standards, Communication, Depression prevention & control, Education, Nursing, Continuing organization & administration, Neoplasms psychology, Oncology Nursing education
- Abstract
Depression is a common response among cancer patients to their diagnosis and treatment; however, it goes undetected by healthcare providers in about 50% of cases. Communication skills training has been suggested as means to help nurses detect and respond to patient depression. We developed and pilot tested a communication skills training workshop based around 6 strategies. The training program consisted of 2 half-day experiential workshops that included didactic teaching, exemplary video, and role play. The aim of the study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the communication skills training. Fifteen nurses were recruited from the ambulatory nursing service at (redacted). Standardized patient assessments were used to measure strategy uptake. The presence of each strategy was rated on a 4-point scale from "not attempted" to "successfully attempted." Nurses also completed evaluations of the training program. The nurses attempted 3 of 6 strategies more commonly after training, and a trend to significance was observed in a fourth strategy. The nurses reported more confidence to deal with patient depression and had greater self-efficacy. This short training program demonstrated success in improving nurse communication skills and confidence in dealing with patient depression. A larger trial of the training is planned.
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- 2009
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13. Obfuscating clinical and political views on demoralization.
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Kissane D
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- Humans, Attitude to Health, Depression psychology, Grief, Politics
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- 2005
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14. Demoralisation, depression and desire for death: problems with the Dutch guidelines for euthanasia of the mentally ill.
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Kissane DW and Kelly BJ
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- Health Personnel, Helsinki Declaration, Humans, International Cooperation, Mental Disorders psychology, Netherlands, Attitude to Death, Depression psychology, Ethics, Research, Euthanasia psychology, Mental Health Services standards, Psychiatry ethics, Suicide, Assisted psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Given the recent publication of Dutch guidelines for euthanasia of the mentally ill, our aim in this paper is to review the clinical role of the psychiatrist in assessing patients who seek euthanasia or physician-assisted suicide., Method: Three areas are examined that are informative of the role of the psychiatrist in assessing patients who desire death: recent surveys of psychiatrists' attitudes, empirical and clinical studies, and treatment issues., Results: Demoralisation and depression emerge as pertinent clinical issues worthy of psychiatric intervention. The role of the psychiatrist is complex and includes issues of assessment, systems, countertransference and treatment., Conclusions: Dutch guidelines for physician-assisted suicide in the mentally ill generate serious concern given the uncertainty of prognosis, potential range and variability of outcome of treatments of suicidality and the boundary violations that are involved for the psychiatrist. The guidelines have the potential to dangerously alter the practice of psychiatry and should be condemned.
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- 2000
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15. Anxiety and depression in adult cancer patients: ESMO Clinical Practice Guideline
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Grassi, L, Caruso, R, Riba, M B, Lloyd-Williams, M, Kissane, D, Rodin, G, Mcfarland, D, Campos-Ródenas, R, Zachariae, R, Santini, D, and Ripamonti, C I
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,depression ,Socio-culturale ,cancer ,psycho-oncology ,LS5_12 ,anxiety ,oncology ,psychiatry - Abstract
[No abstract]
- Published
- 2023
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