Determination of factors associated with hospitalization in breast cancer survivors.

@article{Oleske2004DeterminationOF,
  title={Determination of factors associated with hospitalization in breast cancer survivors.},
  author={Denise M. Oleske and Melody A Cobleigh and Marcia Phillips and Karen L. Nachman},
  journal={Oncology nursing forum},
  year={2004},
  volume={31 6},
  pages={
          1081-8
        }
}
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES To identify factors associated with hospitalization after diagnosis of breast cancer in working-age women. DESIGN Descriptive, retrospective survey. SETTING Caseload of a single medical oncologist affiliated with an urban, not-for-profit, academic medical center. SAMPLE 123 consecutively evaluated women aged 21-65 years with breast cancer associated with projected survival greater than three years. METHODS Data were collected from an electronic clinical file with… 
Menopausal Symptoms among Breast Cancer Patients: A Potential Indicator of Favorable Prognosis
TLDR
This large, population-based cohort study of women with breast cancer confirms that experiencing menopausal symptoms is an indicator of favorable breast cancer prognosis.
Predictors of Health Care Use of Women with Breast Cancer: A Systematic Review
TLDR
In conclusion, sociodemographic, medical, and treatment‐related factors were consistently associated with (higher) health care use of breast cancer patients, and practitioners may use this information to anticipate future use of subgroups of patients.
Patterns of care in early-stage breast cancer survivors in the first year after cessation of active treatment.
  • J. Mandelblatt, W. Lawrence, +4 authors P. Ganz
  • Medicine, Psychology
    Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology
  • 2006
TLDR
Use of health services is frequent and intensive in the first year after treatment for breast cancer, and there is room for improvement in providing guideline-suggested surveillance mammography for survivors.
History of Major Depressive Disorder Prospectively Predicts Worse Quality of Life in Women with Breast Cancer
TLDR
Findings suggest that breast cancer patients with a history of resolved major depressive disorder are at increased risk for declines in physical functioning during chemotherapy relative to patients with no history of depression.
Urinary symptoms in breast cancer
TLDR
Clinicians should screen for urinary symptoms in breast cancer survivors and should offer treatment recommendations or make referrals as appropriate, according to the authors of this report.
Perceived Unmet Needs and Health-Related Quality of Life of Chinese Cancer Survivors at 1 Year After Treatment
TLDR
The results provided useful information on the special needs of survivors that may affect their HRQoL, enabling clinicians to plan better how to allocate existing limited resources to those who most require them.
Anxiety and Depression in Lung Cancer Patients
TLDR
Investigation of two major mental health disorders, anxiety and depression in patients with lung cancer found hospitalization is associated with higher rates of anxiety and Depression and appropriate interventions are necessary.
Quality of care: Distress, health care use and needs of women with breast cancer
TLDR
Developers of distress interventions are advised to target fatigue and lack of physical strength as well as life-satisfaction and cancer worry in their program and addressing needs in the psychological, and health system and informational domains should take priority.
An international review of the patterns and determinants of health service utilisation by adult cancer survivors
TLDR
Younger, white cancer survivors were most likely to receive follow-up screening, preventive care, visit their physician, utilise professional mental health services and least likely to be hospitalised.
...
1
2
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 68 REFERENCES
Menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors.
TLDR
Menopausal symptoms appear to be a significant problem for breast cancer survivors and nurses can inform women that menopausal symptoms may be experienced following breast cancer treatment and that these Symptoms may be more severe than those experienced by healthy women without cancer.
Hot flashes and related outcomes in breast cancer survivors and matched comparison women.
TLDR
The findings guide the assessment of the uniqueness of the problem of hot flashes experienced by breast cancer survivors and help define outcomes to address in clinical practice or include in future hot flash intervention research.
Predicting Psychosocial Risk in Patients With Breast Cancer
TLDR
A sample of 227 newly diagnosed breast cancer patients were interviewed systematically by a clinical social worker and were subsequently classified for risk of psychosocial distress in the year after diagnosis, and a clinically usable risk prediction model was constructed.
Life after breast cancer: understanding women's health-related quality of life and sexual functioning.
TLDR
BCS report more frequent physical and menopausal symptoms than healthy women, yet report HRQL and sexual functioning comparable to that of healthy, age-matched women.
Physical activity, disability, and the risk of hospitalization for breast cancer among older women.
  • K. Wyrwich, F. Wolinsky
  • Medicine
    The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences
  • 2000
TLDR
The intriguing finding from the Iowa 65+ Rural Health Study that disabled older women's risk for breast cancer was reduced could not be replicated in the LSOA, although power was limited.
Breast cancer treatment-related patterns in side effects, psychological distress, and perceived health status.
  • C. Hoskins
  • Medicine, Psychology
    Oncology nursing forum
  • 1997
TLDR
Patterns in side effects should enable clinicians to anticipate needs for planning methods of control over time and Nurses must assess side effects from a multidimensional perspective at all phases.
Characteristics of women at risk for psychosocial distress in the year after breast cancer.
TLDR
While both groups showed improvement over the year following diagnosis, the at-risk group had significantly more problems 1 year later, while half of both groups continue to have sexual dysfunction.
Validity of self-reported diagnoses leading to hospitalization: a comparison of self-reports with hospital records in a prospective study of American adults.
TLDR
The results suggest that self-reports of some diseases can be taken as accurate, but self- Reports of other conditions might require medical record verification in epidemiologic follow-up studies.
Prevalence of menopausal symptoms among women with a history of breast cancer and attitudes toward estrogen replacement therapy.
TLDR
Vasomotor symptoms have a significant impact on the quality of life of breast cancer patients and clinical trials to determine the safest and the most effective ways to relieve these symptoms are needed.
Long-term quality of life after breast cancer: comparison of 8-year survivors with population controls.
TLDR
In most domains and for women without further disease events after diagnosis, quality of life does not seem to be permanently and globally impaired by breast cancer, and breast cancer survivors who remain free of disease probably do not need organized late psychosocial follow-up to improvequality of life.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...