神经肿瘤患者的痛苦及其对沟通的影响。

Carolin Roos, Johannes Weller, Christiane Landwehr, Anja Sciermoch, Cathrina Duffy, Karoline Kohlmann, Christina Schaub, Theophilos Tzaridis, Matthias Schneider, Patrick Schuss, Ulrich Herrlinger, Niklas Schäfer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

心理情绪困扰影响癌症患者,包括诊断为恶性脑肿瘤的患者。移情、专业知识和会话技巧是确保与患者成功沟通的必要条件。本研究的目的是评估在与患者会面之前了解患者的沟通需求是否会对神经肿瘤学家有所帮助。我们神经肿瘤中心的患者被要求完成国家综合癌症网络焦虑温度计(DT)和一份关于患者与治疗医生沟通期望的研究特定问卷。这些问题针对诸如关注/护理以及对其疾病和预后的认识等问题。比较患者之间的重要性评分,高与低的痛苦评分,以分析痛苦对医患沟通中患者需求的影响。共有81例患者完成了DT和问卷调查。1 / 3 (n = 27)患有IDH野生型星形细胞瘤,42例(51.9%)患者因原发或复发疾病接受治疗。整个队列的平均窘迫为4.88(标准差±2.64),56.8%的患者窘迫评分较高(10分制≥5分)。大多数患者将所有问题评估为重要或非常重要的沟通问题,并且在大多数项目的高痛苦水平患者中,重要性评级增加。平均重要性评分与痛苦评分显著相关(p < 0.001)。神经肿瘤患者的痛苦增加。与痛苦程度较低的患者相比,痛苦程度较高的患者认为关注/护理和有关疾病的医疗信息更重要。使用痛苦评估可以帮助医生和高级从业人员定制他们与患者成功沟通的讨论内容。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Distress in Neuro-Oncology Patients and Its Implications for Communication.

Distress in Neuro-Oncology Patients and Its Implications for Communication.

Distress in Neuro-Oncology Patients and Its Implications for Communication.

Psychoemotional distress affects patients with cancer, including patients with a diagnosis of a malignant brain tumor. Empathy, professional expertise, and conversational skills are required to ensure successful communication with patients. The purpose of this study was to assess whether knowing the communication needs of patients would be helpful to neuro-oncologists before meeting with them. Patients in our neuro-oncology center were asked to complete the National Comprehensive Cancer Network Distress Thermometer (DT) and a study-specific questionnaire on patients' expectations for communication with the treating physician. The questions targeted issues such as attention/caring and awareness of their disease and prognosis. Importance ratings were compared between patients, with high vs. low distress scores to analyze the impact of distress on the patient's needs in physician-patient communication. A total of 81 patients completed the DT and questionnaire. One third (n = 27) had IDH wild-type astrocytoma, and 42 patients (51.9%) were undergoing therapy for primary or recurrent disease. Mean distress was 4.88 (standard deviation ± 2.64) in the whole cohort, and 56.8% of patients had a high distress score (≥ 5 on a 10-point scale). All issues were assessed as important or very important for communication by the majority of patients, and importance ratings increased in patients with high distress levels for most items. Mean importance ratings correlated significantly with distress scores (p < .001). Distress was increased in neuro-oncology patients. Patients with higher distress levels considered issues of both attention/caring and medical information about the disease as more important than patients with lower distress levels. Using distress assessment may help physicians and advanced practitioners to tailor the contents of their discussion for successful communication with patients.

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