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Predictive Factors Associated with Declining Psycho-Oncological Support in Patients with Cancer. | LitMetric

Predictive Factors Associated with Declining Psycho-Oncological Support in Patients with Cancer.

Curr Oncol

Department of Consultation-Liaison-Psychiatry and Psychosomatic Medicine, University Hospital Zurich, University of Zurich, Culmannstrasse 8, 8091 Zürich, Switzerland.

Published: November 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • International cancer treatment guidelines suggest that nurses should routinely screen for patient distress to provide psycho-oncological support.
  • This study uses machine learning to analyze data from 4,064 patients to identify factors predicting the decline of psycho-oncological support among patients.
  • The findings indicate that older patients and those with lower distress scores are more likely to refuse support, highlighting the need for improved nurse training and time to address patient misconceptions about such assistance.

Article Abstract

(1) Background: International cancer treatment guidelines recommend low-threshold psycho-oncological support based on nurses' routine distress screening (e.g., via the distress thermometer and problem list). This study aims to explore factors which are associated with declining psycho-oncological support in order to increase nurses' efficiency in screening patients for psycho-oncological support needs. (2) Methods: Using machine learning, routinely recorded clinical data from 4064 patients was analyzed for predictors of patients declining psycho-oncological support. Cross validation and nested resampling were used to guard against model overfitting. (3) Results: The developed model detects patients who decline psycho-oncological support with a sensitivity of 89% (area under the cure of 79%, accuracy of 68.5%). Overall, older patients, patients with a lower score on the distress thermometer, fewer comorbidities, few physical problems, and those who do not feel sad, afraid, or worried refused psycho-oncological support. (4) Conclusions: Thus, current screening procedures seem worthy to be part of daily nursing routines in oncology, but nurses may need more time and training to rule out misconceptions of patients on psycho-oncological support.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10670809PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30110707DOI Listing

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