5 research outputs found
St. Martin\u27s Episcopal School Performing Arts Department
St. Martin\u27s Episcopal School is located in Metairie on an 18-acre campus, bordered by Airline Drive, West Metairie, Green Acres and Haring Roads. This organization is a PreK-12, nonprofit, independent school
Depression Screening and Patient Outcomes in Cancer: A Systematic Review
Several practice guidelines recommend screening for depression in cancer care, but no systematic reviews have examined whether there is evidence that depression screening benefits cancer patients. The objective was to evaluate the potential benefits of depression screening in cancer patients by assessing the (1) accuracy of depression screening tools; (2) effectiveness of depression treatment; and (3) effect of depression screening, either alone or in the context of comprehensive depression care, on depression outcomes.Data sources were CINAHL, Cochrane, EMBASE, ISI, MEDLINE, PsycINFO and SCOPUS databases through January 24, 2011; manual journal searches; reference lists; citation tracking; trial registry reviews. Articles on cancer patients were included if they (1) compared a depression screening instrument to a valid criterion for major depressive disorder (MDD); (2) compared depression treatment with placebo or usual care in a randomized controlled trial (RCT); (3) assessed the effect of screening on depression outcomes in a RCT.There were 19 studies of screening accuracy, 1 MDD treatment RCT, but no RCTs that investigated effects of screening on depression outcomes. Screening accuracy studies generally had small sample sizes (median = 17 depression cases) and used exploratory methods to set sample-specific cutoff scores that varied substantially across studies. A nurse-delivered intervention for MDD reduced depressive symptoms moderately (effect size = 0.37).The one treatment study reviewed reported modest improvement in depressive symptoms, but no evidence was found on whether or not depression screening in cancer patients, either alone or in the context of optimal depression care, improves depression outcomes compared to usual care. Depression screening in cancer should be evaluated in a RCT in which all patients identified as depressed, either through screening or via physician recognition and referral in a control group, have access to comprehensive depression care
New directions for patient-centred care in scleroderma : the Scleroderma Patient-centred Intervention Network (SPIN)
Systemic sclerosis (SSc), or scleroderma,
is a chronic multisystem autoimmune
disorder characterised by
thickening and fibrosis of the skin and
by the involvement of internal organs
such as the lungs, kidneys, gastrointestinal
tract, and heart. Because there is
no cure, feasibly-implemented and easily
accessible evidence-based interventions
to improve health-related quality
of life (HRQoL) are needed. Due to a
lack of evidence, however, specific recommendations
have not been made
regarding non-pharmacological interventions
(e.g. behavioural/psychological,
educational, physical/occupational
therapy) to improve HRQoL in SSc. The
Scleroderma Patient-centred Intervention
Network (SPIN) was recently organised
to address this gap. SPIN is
comprised of patient representatives,
clinicians, and researchers from Canada,
the USA, and Europe. The goal
of SPIN, as described in this article, is
to develop, test, and disseminate a set
of accessible interventions designed to
complement standard care in order to
improve HRQoL outcomes in SSc.The initial organisational meeting for SPIN was funded by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Meetings, Planning, and Dissemination grant to B.D. Thombs (KPE-109130), Sclerodermie Quebec, and the Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research of the Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec. SPIN receives finding support from the Sclemderma Society of Ontario, the Scleroderma Society of Canada, and Sclerodermie Quebec. B.D. Thombs and M. Hudson are supported by New Investigator awards from the CIHR, and Etablissement de Jeunes Chercheurs awards from the Fonds de la Recherche en Sante Quebec (FRSQ). M. Baron is the director of the Canadian Scleroderma Research Group, which receives grant folding from the CIHR, the Scleroderma Society of Canada and its provincial chapters, Scleroderma Society of Ontario, Sclerodermie Quebec, and the Ontario Arthritis Society, and educational grants from Actelion Pharmaceuticals and Pfizer. M.D. Mayes and S. Assassi are supported by the NIH/NIAMS Scleroderma Center of Research Translation grant no. P50-AR054144. S.J. Motivala is supported by an NIH career development grant (K23 AG027860) and the UCLA Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology. D. Khanna is supported by a NIH/NIAMS K23 AR053858-04) and NIH/NIAMS U01 AR057936A, the National Institutes of Health through the NIH Roadmap for Medical Research Grant (AR052177), and has served as a consultant or on speakers bureau for Actelion, BMS, Gilead, Pfizer, and United Therapeutics