Psychosocial Needs Distress of AYA Oncology Patients-Andrea
Download
Report
Transcript Psychosocial Needs Distress of AYA Oncology Patients-Andrea
Psychosocial Needs/
Distress of AYA Oncology
Patients
Andrea Johnson, MSW, RSW
PhD Student- UBC
Why Adolescents?
Significant physical, psychological, emotional, social, vocational
growth during AYA years (Abrams, Hazen, & Penson, 2007; Hollis
& Morgan, 2001; Woodgate, 2006).
Dichotomy of care (Fernandez, C., Fraser, G., Freeman, C.,
Grunfeld, E., Gupta, A., Mery, L.S.,…Schacter, B., 2011; Bleyer,
W.A. & Barr, R.D, 2007).
The ‘Lost Tribe’ (Fernandez & Barr, 2006).
Can be a complex population to care for
Psychosocial Challenges
Independence and autonomy
Peer relationships/dependence on family
Changes in physical appearance
Self-Esteem; Identity
Sexuality and Fertility
Future-planning
Fears and difficult events within cancer (Hedstrom, 2007)
But positive experiences too! (Bellizi et al, 2012; Karian et al,
1995)
Identity Development
“You’re no longer that person
you used to be. The day
you’re told that you have
cancer, you’re no longer that
person you were a second
ago.”
Body Image & Self-Esteem
“Before treatment, I was a
cool kid in high school. I
had friends, everything
was good. . . And then
coming back, I had this
thin hair, I was pale, I was
overweight. I was
walking with 2 canes and
limping and hunched over.
I was different.”
Interrupted Lives
I find I matured beyond my
years but I’m 2 years younger
than everyone else in a sense.
I can’t drive yet, I don’t have a
job, I haven’t graduated school
yet. All my friends are
working, going to school,
driving, they have boyfriends.
I mean they’re having sex and
I just can’t relate to any of
this.”
Adolescent Oncology Narratives
“Teens definitely need different care than kids… we’re struggling severely
with our identity already, you throw cancer in the mix… and that just
messes it up even more.”
“Sometimes we want to cry… we are not showing it.”
“Sometimes doctors and nurses don’t get it… our world is very
small…we need friends around us who understand.”
“It’s the smaller picture we care about (how this is affecting my life right
now!) as opposed to the bigger picture.”
“Get to know me outside of my cancer.”
“You can’t treat me like a kid but you also can’t treat me like an adult…
cancer is a very scary thing to go through.”
Distress:
Distress: ‘a multifactorial, unpleasant emotional experience
of a psychological (cognitive, behavioral, emotional), social,
and/or spiritual nature that may interfere with the ability to
cope effectively with cancer, its physical symptoms, and its
treatment.’ (NCCN, 2012)
Distress- Adolescents with Cancer
Adolescents and young adults with cancer may be at greater risk
for distress
Argued that adolescents experience greater distress as compared to
children or adults (Kwak et al, 2013b)
Inconsistent significant distress levels of AYA reported in
literature- ranging from 6-41% (Kwak et al., 2013).
Adolescent distress is under-reported and under-addressed
Distress is often not recognized by clinicians
Distress can occur at any point along the cancer trajectory
Why Screen for Distress??
Psychosocial screening and intervention can reduce levels of
cancer-related distress and improve QOL (Anderson, 2002;
Carlson & Bultz, 2004)
Early identification of patients at risk for significant psychosocial
distress.
Triaging psychosocial distress is not always accurate.
Theory should be used to guide screening practice- developmental
theory provides good rationale
Distress- ‘vital sign’
Canadian Strategy for Cancer Control (2004) added ‘distress’ as a new
vital sign to accompany temperature, respiration, heart rate, blood
pressure, and pain
Challenges to Screening
Psychosocial screening for adults with cancer- late 80’s (Zabora,
2012)
Screening practices not yet widely adopted for adolescents with
cancer (despite extensive use in adult oncology)
Lack of standardized screening measures for adolescent distress
Does the measure actually measure what it is supposed to? How
can we best assess AYA distress?
Effectiveness of measures to screen for distress- previous
studies focused on distress measures regardless whether
measures were accurately identifying AYA distress (Zebrack et
al., 2012)
Barriers to implementation
Research Findings- Distress
Adults: 20-40% of survivors experienced high levels of distress
throughout their illness- 30% at clinically significant levels of
distress (Carlson et al, 2004; Gao, Bennett, Stark, Murray, &
Higginson, 2010).
AYA:
Within 4 months and 12 months since diagnosis, 28% of AYA
oncology patients experienced distress that exceeded population
norms; improved at 6 months (Kwak et al., 2013a.).
Levels of distress equally distributed regardless of diagnosis type,
severity or survival rate (Kwak et al., 2013a.).
At 6 and 12 months, 39 % and 44%, of patients reported moderate to
severe levels of PTSS; 29% had PTSS levels of PTSD (Kwak et al.,
2013b.)
Higher rates of PTSS were found in AYAs with higher-survival rates
(Kwak et al., 2013b)
12% of AYAs reported clinically significant choronic distress
throughout 12 months since diagnosis; 15% reported delayed distress.
41% of patients reported un-met counseling needs- this was
significantly related to distress over time (Zebrack, Burg, & Vaitones,
2012)
Adolescents often have un-met psychosocial needs (Kent et al., 2012)
Context for Developing Standardized
Distress Guidelines…
No standardized screening practice for AYAs
Lack of validated distress screening measures for adolescents with cancer
Adolescents are experiencing distress that is not being screened and
resulting in unmet needs
Adolescents are an under-researched population- we simply don’t know
much about their unique distress
Recent studies have demonstrated that AYA distress exceeds population
norms
National AYA Distress Sub-Committee
Sub-committee of the Canadian National Adolescent and Young
Adult Cancer Task Force
Developed to address the gaps in the current context of distress
screening
National psychosocial clinician committee member representation
Pediatric and adult oncology clinician committee representation
Research Project/Goal: AYA Distress Screening Tool Validation
PIs: Dr. Anne Klassen (McMaster); Dr. Norma D’Agostino (PMH)
AYA Distress Screening Tool
Validation
To assess the only validated distress screening tools for AYAs with
cancer (AUS)
To adapt these screening tools (for on-treatment and off-treatment)
for use in Canada with AYAs 15-29 years old; English and French
versions
Australian AYA Oncology Distress Screening Tool:
Distress Thermometer (modified for AYA specific areas of
distress); separate versions for treatment and survivorship.
Pilot-tested in AUS and found to be valid.
Clinical Assessment Questions
Demographics
Funding has been received from C17 for adaptation of this AUS
distress screening tool for AYAs 15-29 in Canada
Current phase of the project: content validation
Face validity qualitative interviews currently being conducted
in English and French (ON & QC)
Next phase of project: field validation.
Once completed and analyzed, large-scale field validation study
will be extended to sites across Canada
The field test-data will be analyzed to identify items that represent
best indicators of distress based on performance against a
standardized set of psychometric criteria.
Goal is to have a valid measure of AYA oncology distress.
AYA oncology specific screening tool can enhance both research
and clinical practice with cancer.
Will assist in development of a national screening program for
adolescents and young adults with cancer.
Where to from here?
Distress is being under-screened yet many adolescents are
experiencing significant distress
How best to screen for distress?? Goal of this project…
Screening practice at your local adult oncology centre?
BCCA (PSSCAN-R)
Strengths/weaknesses of different screening measures
Ask questions of this population…