A cross-cultural convergent parallel mixed methods study of what makes a cancer-related symptom or functional health problem clinically important

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

A cross-cultural convergent parallel mixed methods study of what makes a cancer-related symptom or functional health problem clinically important. / Giesinger, Johannes M; Aaronson, Neil K; Arraras, Juan I; Efficace, Fabio; Grønvold, Mogens; Kieffer, Jacobien M; Loth, Fanny L; Petersen, Morten Aa; Ramage, John; Tomaszewski, Krzysztof A; Young, Teresa; Holzner, Bernhard; EORTC Quality of Life Group.

In: Psycho-Oncology, Vol. 27, No. 2, 2018, p. 548-555.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Giesinger, JM, Aaronson, NK, Arraras, JI, Efficace, F, Grønvold, M, Kieffer, JM, Loth, FL, Petersen, MA, Ramage, J, Tomaszewski, KA, Young, T, Holzner, B & EORTC Quality of Life Group 2018, 'A cross-cultural convergent parallel mixed methods study of what makes a cancer-related symptom or functional health problem clinically important', Psycho-Oncology, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 548-555. https://doi.org/10.1002/pon.4548

APA

Giesinger, J. M., Aaronson, N. K., Arraras, J. I., Efficace, F., Grønvold, M., Kieffer, J. M., Loth, F. L., Petersen, M. A., Ramage, J., Tomaszewski, K. A., Young, T., Holzner, B., & EORTC Quality of Life Group (2018). A cross-cultural convergent parallel mixed methods study of what makes a cancer-related symptom or functional health problem clinically important. Psycho-Oncology, 27(2), 548-555. https://doi.org/10.1002/pon.4548

Vancouver

Giesinger JM, Aaronson NK, Arraras JI, Efficace F, Grønvold M, Kieffer JM et al. A cross-cultural convergent parallel mixed methods study of what makes a cancer-related symptom or functional health problem clinically important. Psycho-Oncology. 2018;27(2):548-555. https://doi.org/10.1002/pon.4548

Author

Giesinger, Johannes M ; Aaronson, Neil K ; Arraras, Juan I ; Efficace, Fabio ; Grønvold, Mogens ; Kieffer, Jacobien M ; Loth, Fanny L ; Petersen, Morten Aa ; Ramage, John ; Tomaszewski, Krzysztof A ; Young, Teresa ; Holzner, Bernhard ; EORTC Quality of Life Group. / A cross-cultural convergent parallel mixed methods study of what makes a cancer-related symptom or functional health problem clinically important. In: Psycho-Oncology. 2018 ; Vol. 27, No. 2. pp. 548-555.

Bibtex

@article{76c3d24e7e31462d81b14c2400f7c29d,
title = "A cross-cultural convergent parallel mixed methods study of what makes a cancer-related symptom or functional health problem clinically important",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: In this study, we investigated what makes a symptom or functional impairment clinically important, that is, relevant for a patient to discuss with a health care professional (HCP). This is the first part of a European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life Group project focusing on the development of thresholds for clinical importance for the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire and its corresponding computer-adaptive version.METHODS: We conducted interviews with cancer patients and HCPs in 6 European countries. Participants were asked to name aspects of a symptom or problem that make it clinically important and to provide importance ratings for a predefined set of aspects (eg, need for help and limitations of daily functioning).RESULTS: We conducted interviews with 83 cancer patients (mean age, 60.3 y; 50.6% men) and 67 HCPs. Participants related clinical importance to limitations of everyday life (patients, 65.1%; HCPs, 77.6%), the emotional impact of a symptom/problem (patients, 53.0%; HCPs, 64.2%), and duration/frequency (patients, 51.8%; HCPs, 49.3%). In the patient sample, importance ratings were highest for worries by partner or family, limitations in everyday life, and need for help from the medical staff. Health care professionals rated limitations in everyday life and need for help from the medical staff to be most important.CONCLUSIONS: Limitations in everyday life, need for (medical) help, and emotional impact on the patient or family/partner were found to be relevant aspects of clinical importance. Based on these findings, we will define anchor items for the development of thresholds for clinical importance for the EORTC measures in a Europe-wide field study.",
author = "Giesinger, {Johannes M} and Aaronson, {Neil K} and Arraras, {Juan I} and Fabio Efficace and Mogens Gr{\o}nvold and Kieffer, {Jacobien M} and Loth, {Fanny L} and Petersen, {Morten Aa} and John Ramage and Tomaszewski, {Krzysztof A} and Teresa Young and Bernhard Holzner and {EORTC Quality of Life Group}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1002/pon.4548",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "548--555",
journal = "Psycho-Oncology",
issn = "1057-9249",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A cross-cultural convergent parallel mixed methods study of what makes a cancer-related symptom or functional health problem clinically important

AU - Giesinger, Johannes M

AU - Aaronson, Neil K

AU - Arraras, Juan I

AU - Efficace, Fabio

AU - Grønvold, Mogens

AU - Kieffer, Jacobien M

AU - Loth, Fanny L

AU - Petersen, Morten Aa

AU - Ramage, John

AU - Tomaszewski, Krzysztof A

AU - Young, Teresa

AU - Holzner, Bernhard

AU - EORTC Quality of Life Group

N1 - Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - OBJECTIVE: In this study, we investigated what makes a symptom or functional impairment clinically important, that is, relevant for a patient to discuss with a health care professional (HCP). This is the first part of a European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life Group project focusing on the development of thresholds for clinical importance for the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire and its corresponding computer-adaptive version.METHODS: We conducted interviews with cancer patients and HCPs in 6 European countries. Participants were asked to name aspects of a symptom or problem that make it clinically important and to provide importance ratings for a predefined set of aspects (eg, need for help and limitations of daily functioning).RESULTS: We conducted interviews with 83 cancer patients (mean age, 60.3 y; 50.6% men) and 67 HCPs. Participants related clinical importance to limitations of everyday life (patients, 65.1%; HCPs, 77.6%), the emotional impact of a symptom/problem (patients, 53.0%; HCPs, 64.2%), and duration/frequency (patients, 51.8%; HCPs, 49.3%). In the patient sample, importance ratings were highest for worries by partner or family, limitations in everyday life, and need for help from the medical staff. Health care professionals rated limitations in everyday life and need for help from the medical staff to be most important.CONCLUSIONS: Limitations in everyday life, need for (medical) help, and emotional impact on the patient or family/partner were found to be relevant aspects of clinical importance. Based on these findings, we will define anchor items for the development of thresholds for clinical importance for the EORTC measures in a Europe-wide field study.

AB - OBJECTIVE: In this study, we investigated what makes a symptom or functional impairment clinically important, that is, relevant for a patient to discuss with a health care professional (HCP). This is the first part of a European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life Group project focusing on the development of thresholds for clinical importance for the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire and its corresponding computer-adaptive version.METHODS: We conducted interviews with cancer patients and HCPs in 6 European countries. Participants were asked to name aspects of a symptom or problem that make it clinically important and to provide importance ratings for a predefined set of aspects (eg, need for help and limitations of daily functioning).RESULTS: We conducted interviews with 83 cancer patients (mean age, 60.3 y; 50.6% men) and 67 HCPs. Participants related clinical importance to limitations of everyday life (patients, 65.1%; HCPs, 77.6%), the emotional impact of a symptom/problem (patients, 53.0%; HCPs, 64.2%), and duration/frequency (patients, 51.8%; HCPs, 49.3%). In the patient sample, importance ratings were highest for worries by partner or family, limitations in everyday life, and need for help from the medical staff. Health care professionals rated limitations in everyday life and need for help from the medical staff to be most important.CONCLUSIONS: Limitations in everyday life, need for (medical) help, and emotional impact on the patient or family/partner were found to be relevant aspects of clinical importance. Based on these findings, we will define anchor items for the development of thresholds for clinical importance for the EORTC measures in a Europe-wide field study.

U2 - 10.1002/pon.4548

DO - 10.1002/pon.4548

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28857424

VL - 27

SP - 548

EP - 555

JO - Psycho-Oncology

JF - Psycho-Oncology

SN - 1057-9249

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 198724205