Patients in palliative care-development of a predictive model for anxiety using routine data

Article indépendant

HOFMANN, Sonja | HESS, Stephanie | KLEIN, Carsten | LINDENA, Gabriele | RADBRUCH, Lukas | OSTGATHE, Christoph

INTRODUCTION: Anxiety is one of the most common psychological symptoms in patients in a palliative care situation. This study aims to develop a predictive model for anxiety using data from the standard documentation routine. METHODS: Data sets of palliative care patients collected by the German quality management benchmarking system called Hospice and Palliative Care Evaluation (HOPE) from 2007 to 2011 were randomly divided into a training set containing two-thirds of the data and a test set with the remaining one-third. We dichotomized anxiety levels, proxy rated by medical staff using the validated HOPE Symptom and Problem Checklist, into two groups with no or mild anxiety versus moderate or severe anxiety. Using the training set, a multivariable logistic regression model was developed by backward stepwise selection. Predictive accuracy was evaluated by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) based on the test set. RESULTS: An analysis of 9924 data sets suggests a predictive model for anxiety in patients receiving palliative care which contains gender, age, ECOG, living situation, pain, nausea, dyspnea, loss of appetite, tiredness, need for assistance with activities of daily living, problems with organization of care, medication with sedatives/anxiolytics, antidepressants, antihypertensive drugs, laxatives, and antibiotics. It results in a fair predictive value (AUC = 0.72). CONCLUSIONS: Routinely collected data providing individual-, disease- and therapy-related information contain valuable information that is useful for the prediction of anxiety risks in patients receiving palliative care. These findings could thus be advantageous for providing appropriate support for patients in palliative care settings and should receive special attention in future research.

http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0179415&type=printable

Voir la revue «Plos One, 12»

Autres numéros de la revue «Plos One»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Patients in palliative care-development of a ...

Article | HOFMANN, Sonja | Plos One | n°8 | vol.12

INTRODUCTION: Anxiety is one of the most common psychological symptoms in patients in a palliative care situation. This study aims to develop a predictive model for anxiety using data from the standard documentation routine. METHO...

Patients in palliative care-development of a ...

Article indépendant | HOFMANN, Sonja | Plos One | n°8 | vol.12

INTRODUCTION: Anxiety is one of the most common psychological symptoms in patients in a palliative care situation. This study aims to develop a predictive model for anxiety using data from the standard documentation routine. METHO...

Fungating wounds = Plaies bourgeonnantes : dé...

Article | MERZ, Thomas | Breast care | vol.6

La prise en charge des plaies malignes, bourgeonnantes est un défi pour l'équipe de soins palliatifs. Des lésions ouvertes, malodorantes par exemple sont des signes de maladies sous-jacentes. Une approche multidimensionnelle est n...

De la même série

Associations between physician home visits fo...

Article indépendant | TANUSEPUTRO, Peter | Plos One | n°2 | vol.13

BACKGROUND: While most individuals wish to die at home, the reality is that most will die in hospital. AIM: To determine whether receiving a physician home visit near the end-of-life is associated with lower odds of death in a hos...

Assessing the capability to experience a 'goo...

Article indépendant | KINGHORN, Philip | Plos One | n°2 | vol.13

BACKGROUND: Sen's capability approach is underspecified; one decision left to those operationalising the approach is how to identify sets of relevant and important capabilities. Sen has suggested that lists be developed for specif...

The prevalence of deranged c-reactive protein...

Article indépendant | GRAY, Sarah | Plos One | n°3 | vol.13

INTRODUCTION: Amongst patients with incurable cancer approaching death, cachexia is common and associated with adverse outcomes. The term cachexia lacks a universally accepted definition and there is no consensus regarding which v...

Reversals and limitations on high-intensity, ...

Article indépendant | CHAVEZ, Gustavo | Plos One | n°2 | vol.13

IMPORTANCE: Critically ill patients often receive high-intensity life sustaining treatments (LST) in the intensive care unit (ICU), although they can be ineffective and eventually undesired. Determining the risk factors associated...

The impact of stillbirth on bereaved parents ...

Article indépendant | NUZUM, Daniel | Plos One | n°1 | vol.13

PURPOSE: To explore the lived experiences and personal impact of stillbirth on bereaved parents. METHODS: Semi-structured in-depth interviews analysed by Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) on a purposive sample of pare...

Chargement des enrichissements...