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Prognostic Awareness in Caregivers of Patients with Incurable Cancer
Author(s) -
Tamryn F. Gray,
Deborah Forst,
Ryan David Nipp,
Joseph A. Greer,
Jennifer S. Temel,
Areej ElJawahri
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of palliative medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.986
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 1096-6218
pISSN - 1557-7740
DOI - 10.1089/jpm.2020.0236
Subject(s) - medicine , anxiety , depression (economics) , cancer , lung cancer , hospital anxiety and depression scale , distress , odds ratio , family caregivers , psychiatry , clinical psychology , physical therapy , economics , macroeconomics
Background: Little is known about how patients with incurable cancer and caregivers differ in their prognostic awareness, and the relationship between caregiver prognostic awareness and their psychological distress. Objective: To investigate prognostic awareness in caregivers of patients with incurable cancer and prognostic discordance in patient-caregiver dyads and its association with psychological distress. Design: This is a cross-sectional study. Setting/Subjects: In total, subjects were 390 caregivers of adults with incurable lung, gastrointestinal, and brain cancers at a cancer center in the northeastern United States. Measurements: The Prognosis and Treatment Perceptions Questionnaire was used to assess prognostic awareness and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale to assess psychological distress. Results: In total, 39.7% ( n  = 147/370) and 17.3% ( n  = 64/370) caregivers reported clinically significant anxiety and depression symptoms. And 53.7% of caregivers reported the patients' cancer as "curable" and 44.1% reported the cancer was "not terminal." Caregivers' report of curability was not associated with their anxiety (odds ratio [OR] = 0.99, p  = 0.93) or depression (OR = 1.05, p  = 0.32) symptoms. Among 42.5% (124/292) and 26.0% (76/292) of dyads ( n  = 292), both patients and their caregivers agreed in their perception of the cancer as curable and incurable, respectively. In 19.9% of dyads ( n  = 58), patients reported their cancer as curable, while their caregivers reported it as incurable. In 11.6% of dyads ( n  = 34), patients reported the cancer as incurable while caregivers reported it as curable. Conclusions: More than half of caregivers have misperceptions about the patients' likelihood of cure, and one-third of patient-caregiver dyads have discordant perceptions. Supportive care interventions may facilitate conversations and enhance prognostic understanding in patients with incurable cancer and their caregivers.

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