The Relationships between Mood Disturbances and Pain, Hope, and Quality of Life in Hospitalized Cancer Patients with Pain on Regularly Scheduled Opioid Analgesic
Journal article, Peer reviewed
This is a copy of an article published in the journal of palliative medicine © 2010 copyright mary ann liebert, inc.; journal of palliative medicine is available online at: http://www.liebertonline.com.
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2010-03Metadata
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Original version
Utne, I., Miaskowski, C., Bjordal, K., Paul, S.M. & Rustøen, T. (2010). The Relationships between Mood Disturbances and Pain, Hope, and Quality of Life in Hospitalized Cancer Patients with Pain on Regularly Scheduled Opioid Analgesic. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 13 (3), 311-318 http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2009.0294Abstract
Objective: The study purposes were to describe the percentage of patients in one of four mood groups (i.e., neither
anxiety nor depression [NEITHER], only anxiety [ANX], only depression [DEP], both anxiety and depression
[BOTH]) and to evaluate how differences in mood states are related to pain, hope, and quality of life (QOL).
Methods: Oncology inpatients (n=225) completed Brief Pain Inventory, Herth Hope Index (HHI), and the
European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Core QOL Questionnaire-C30. Research nurses
completed Symptom Severity Checklist, Karnofsky Performance Status score, and medical record reviews. Data
were analyzed using x^2, Kruskal-Wallis, one-way analyses of variance (ANOVAs), and analyses of covariance
(ANCOVA).
Results: Thirty-two percent of patients were categorized in the NEITHER group, 12% in the ANX group, 12% in
the DEP group, and 44% in the BOTH group. Younger patients and women were more likely to be in the BOTH
group. While only minimal differences were found among the mood groups on pain intensity scores, patients in
the NEITHER group in general, reported lower pain interference scores than those in the other three groups.
Significant differences were found in HHI scores between the patients in the NEITHER group and the BOTH
group. In addition, patients with both mood disorders reported significantly poorer QOL scores.
Conclusions: Because 44% of the patients had both anxiety and depression, clinicians need to evaluate patients
for the co-occurrence of these two symptoms, evaluate its impact on pain management, hope, and QOL, and
develop appropriate interventions to manage these symptoms.