Explorer

This intervention can add years to depressed, cancer patients' lives

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 11 (ANI): Turns out, palliative care interventions can help patients with depression and advanced cancer live longer.

The Dartmouth-led study drew on data from two randomized controlled trials with advanced cancer patients using ENABLE (Educate, Nurture, Advise, Before Life Ends), a palliative care intervention designed to improve quality of life among patients diagnosed with cancer.

The intervention consisted of an in-person palliative care consultation followed by six weekly structured phone coaching sessions with an advanced practice nurse specializing in palliative care.

Calls then continued monthly until the patient died or the study ended. Topics covered as part of the intervention included coping strategies, symptom management and advanced care planning. The researchers compared the effect that early intervention, delayed intervention or no palliative care intervention (i.e. usual care) had on the survival rates as a function of the patient's initial level of depression.

In general, higher levels of depression at the beginning of the study were associated with shorter survival. This was especially true for those higher in depression in the usual care group (none of whom received the palliative care intervention).

In contrast, the survival rate for those higher in depression who experienced the palliative care intervention - either the early or delayed intervention - improved significantly to the point that they were similar in survival to those with low levels of depression.

The benefits of the palliative care intervention held true when demographics, the cancer site and the severity of the illness were considered.

Co-lead author Jay G. Hull said, "Although the effect of the palliative care intervention on survival is clear, the mechanism behind it is not. One possibility is that those who are depressed are less attentive to their health, illustrating how traditional care may be insufficient to help patients overcome this deficit. Yet, a tailored intervention may succeed by motivating health-promoting behaviors, which may enable patients to live longer."

Co-lead author Anna T. Prescott noted that the findings should not be taken as evidence that depression causes shorter survival, but symptoms of depression could be used as a marker to help doctors identify patients who are at elevated risk for poor outcomes and who could benefit from a palliative care intervention like the one studied in this work.

The study is published in journal Health Psychology. (ANI)


This story has not been edited. It has been published as provided by ANI

View More
Advertisement
Advertisement
25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Advertisement

Top Headline

Salman Khan House Firing: Maha CM Eknath Shinde Meets Actor, Says 'Bishnoi Ko Khatam Kar Denge'
Salman Khan House Firing: Maha CM Eknath Shinde Meets Actor, Says 'Bishnoi Ko Khatam Kar Denge'
Congress Releases List Of Lok Sabha Candidates For Jharkhand, This Candidate To Challenge BJP's Nishikant Dubey In Godda
Congress LS List: This Candidate To Challenge BJP's Nishikant Dubey In Godda, See Fresh Names
Ram Navami Shobha Yatra In Bengal At Centre Of Storm As CM Mamata Flags 'Riots' Concern, PM Modi Reacts
Ram Navami Shobha Yatra In Bengal At Centre Of Storm As CM Mamata Flags 'Riots' Concern, PM Modi Reacts
US NSA Jake Sullivan Postpones India Visit Second Time This Year
US NSA Jake Sullivan Postpones India Visit Second Time This Year
Advertisement
for smartphones
and tablets

Videos

Indrani Mukerjea Exclusive: Life After Sheena Bora Murder Case, Jail Term, And BailAndhra Pradesh C Voter Survey: Will Modi Magic Work On The 25 Seats? | ABP NewsBreaking News: EC action against Randeep Surjewala for his controversial statement on Hema MaliniNavratri Special! Sheeba Chaddha's Delightful Ashtami Celebration, Watch Video | HOT News
Embed widget