A systematic qualitative analysis of psychoeducational interventions for depression in patients with cancer.

@article{Barsevick2002ASQ,
  title={A systematic qualitative analysis of psychoeducational interventions for depression in patients with cancer.},
  author={Andrea Barsevick and Carole W Sweeney and Eileen Haney and Esther Chung},
  journal={Oncology nursing forum},
  year={2002},
  volume={29 1},
  pages={
          73-84; quiz 85-7
        }
}
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES To determine whether research-based recommendations can be made about the clinical management of depression in patients with cancer. DATA SOURCES Reports of scientific studies, qualitative or quantitative systematic reviews of scientific studies, and practice guidelines published from 1980-2000. DATA SYNTHESIS In all, 36 pieces of evidence supported the conclusion that psychoeducational interventions benefit depressive symptoms. Evidence included two well-conducted meta… 
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Evidence-based treatment of depression in patients with cancer.
TLDR
Both psychosocial and pharmacologic interventions have been shown to be efficacious in treating depression in cancer, but further research is needed to establish their relative and combined benefit.
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TLDR
The results of the review support recommendation of behaviour therapy in the care of patients with advanced cancer because of its positive effects on one or more indicators of QoL, for example, depression.
Review: psychoeducational interventions reduce depressive symptoms in cancer
TLDR
Study selection Scientific studies or systematic reviews of scientific studies that examined specific hypotheses, used a comprehensive search strategy, and stated explicit conclusions were selected if they compared a psychoeducational intervention with usual care or an attentional control group.
The Effectiveness of Psychoeducational Intervention on Managing Symptom Clusters in Patients With Cancer: A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials
TLDR
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Psychoeducation for breast cancer: A systematic review and meta-analysis
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TLDR
There is very limited evidence from clinical trials to guide the treatment of cancer patients with a diagnosis of depression, especially for psychological treatments, and high quality trials of treatments for depressed patients are urgently needed.
[Effects of Psychoeducational Intervention for Cancer Survivors: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis].
TLDR
Psychopathic intervention appears to be effective in improving quality of life and coping and self-efficacy, and it is effective in reducing psychological symptoms in cancer survivors, however, low-quality evidence, variability in the designs of existing studies, and publication bias suggest that additional high-quality trials should be conducted in the future.
The effects of psychosocial interventions in cancer and heart disease: a review of systematic reviews
TLDR
The types of psychosocial interventions that have been used with people suffering from heart disease or cancer are examined to evaluate the effects of such interventions on physical outcomes, psychological outcomes or health care usage, and the methodological quality of the included systematic reviews is evaluated.
The Effectiveness of Psychosocial Interventions with Cancer Patients: An Integrative Review of the Literature (2006–2011)
TLDR
Qualitative studies are needed to determine what cancer patients of varied ages, cancer stages, and racial/ethnic backgrounds believe would be an effective intervention to manage their psychosocial needs.
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