1,327 research outputs found
Service Evaluation of 'Living Well with the Impact of Cancer' Courses
The aim of the Penny Brohn Cancer Care Living Well Service Evaluation was to measure the level of benefit that participants were receiving from the Penny Brohn Cancer Care(PBCC)Living Well course and to inform current and future service provision at PBCC.
The Penny Brohn Whole Person Approach model(PB-WPA model), which underpins the Living Well course, was designed to support the âwhole personâ and the course was
intended to meet the needs of people with cancer, as identified by the National Cancer Survivorship Initiative (NCSI).
The combined qualitative and quantitative results of the Living Well Service Evaluation have demonstrated, very clearly at times, that participants were highly satisfied with the course. The immediate benefit of attending was measurable, in terms of improved health related quality of life (HRQoL) and improved MYCaW (Measure yourself Concerns and Wellbeing) concerns and wellbeing.
The evaluation results show that the Living Well course experience enabled the majority of participants to regain control over many aspects of their life, and to start
taking responsibility for their health. The following aspects of the course were identified as the most helpful:
-Specific units of âeducation and explanationâ about cancer and why healthy lifestyle changes to areas such as diet, exercise and relaxation are beneficial
-Advice and education from medical doctors
-The opportunity to share experiences with other participants
For some, this empowerment led to long-term changes in exercise, food consumption,use of self-help techniques and the ability to communicate more freely and openly with family, friends and medical professionals. These improvements were reflected in the 12 month outcome data, where a sustained improvement in HRQoL and MYCaW concerns
was reported by many clients.
Such patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) are limited in what they can measure, thus qualitative data were also collected to ensure that participants were able
to share their experiences (positive or negative) of the Living Well course, and their subsequent experiences of applying the education and techniques learnt on the
course.
A picture emerged that identified difficulties in sustaining lifestyle changes at around the 3-6 month follow-up. Participants who returned to PBCC within the 12 month follow-up period, however, were more likely to benefit by reporting a greater improvement in HRQoL and MYCaW scores, plus an improved understanding of how to
make and maintain healthy lifestyle changes to suit their individual circumstances.
In regards to the current NCSI priorities, it is hoped that the data reported in this evaluation go some way to informing the following:
-Information and support from the point of diagnosis
-Managing the consequences of treatment
-Promoting recovery
-Sustaining recovery
-Supporting people with active and advanced disease
-Improving survivorship intelligence
Finally, this report demonstrates how a patient-centred model of support can be effectively evaluated to provide relevant, practical and evidence-based information to
commissioners.
Participant satisfaction:
Participants were very satisfied with the course content, course delivery and resources provided which often exceeded their needs and expectations.
Participant outcomes:
The PB-WPA model successfully encompassed and supported all the types of concerns participants arrived with.
The most frequently reported participant concerns were psychological and emotional,about their wellbeing and about their physical health. On average, participants experienced statistically and clinically significant
improvements in their MYCaW concern and wellbeing scores, and total HRQoL scores,which remained improved over the 12 month follow-up. The aspects of HRQoL that were most likely to improve after attending the Living Well
course were spiritual, emotional and functional wellbeing. Supporters had their own profile of concerns, namely psychological and emotional,supporter specific concerns and practical concerns. Concerns were as severely rated as those from participants with a diagnosis of cancer and also showed statistically
significant average improvements throughout the 12 month follow-up.
The small group of participants with metastatic disease reported significant improvements in their MYCaW concern scores, in line with the whole evaluation group,and a significantly greater improvement in HRQoL over 12 months compared to participants with primary cancer.Participants who returned for more support from PBCC were in more need of support than those who did not return. They were more likely to have poorer HRQoL at baseline
and rate their concerns more severely.
Participants who returned to PBCC experienced more improvement in HRQoL that was likely to be clinically significant. These participants also had a greater degree of improvement in their MYCaW concerns, compared to non-returners. Over half of the participants experienced new concerns over the 12 month follow-up period. Concerns were most frequently associated with psychological and emotional
and physical issues. Furthermore, at 12 months, participants were still experiencing arange of health issues
Integrative Whole Person Oncology Care in the UK
The term âwhole person cancer careâ - an approach that addresses the needs of the person as well as treating the disease - is more widely understood in the UK than its synonym âintegrative oncologyâ. The National Health Service (NHS), provides free access to care for all, which makes it harder to prioritise NHS funding of whole person medicine, where interventions may be multi-modal and lacking in cost-effectiveness data. Despite this, around 30% of cancer patients are known to use some form of complementary or alternative medicine (CAM). This is virtually never medically led, and usually without the support or even the knowledge of their oncology teams, with the exception of one or two large cancer centres. UK oncology services are, however, starting to be influenced from three sides; firstly, by well-developed and more holistic palliative care services; secondly, by directives from central government via the sustainable healthcare agenda; and thirdly, by increasing pressure from patient-led groups and cancer charities. CAM remains unlikely to be provided through the NHS, but nutrition, physical activity, mindfulness, and stress management are already becoming a core part of the NHS âLiving With and Beyond Cancerâ agenda. This supports cancer survivors into stratified pathways of care, based on individual, self-reported holistic needs and risk assessments, which are shared between healthcare professionals and patients. Health and Wellbeing events are being built into cancer care pathways, designed to activate patients into self-management and support positive lifestyle change. Those with greater needs can be directed towards appropriate external providers, where many examples of innovative practice exist. These changes in policy and vision for the NHS present an opportunity for Integrative Oncology to develop further and to reach populations who would, in many other countries, remain underserved or hard-to-reach by whole person approaches
On the Statistical Mechanics of Mass Accommodation at Liquid-Vapor Interfaces
We propose a framework for describing the dynamics associated with the
adsorption of small molecules to liquid-vapor interfaces, using an intermediate
resolution between traditional continuum theories that are bereft of molecular
detail and molecular dynamics simulations that are replete with them. In
particular, we develop an effective single particle equation of motion capable
of describing the physical processes that determine thermal and mass
accommodation probabilities. The effective equation is parameterized with
quantities that vary through space away from the liquid-vapor interface. Of
particular importance in describing the early time dynamics is the spatially
dependent friction, for which we propose a numerical scheme to evaluate from
molecular simulation. Taken together with potentials of mean force computable
with importance sampling methods, we illustrate how to compute the mass
accommodation coefficient and residence time distribution. Throughout, we
highlight the case of ozone adsorption in aqueous solutions and its dependence
on electrolyte composition.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Species Abundances Influence the Net Biodiversity Effect in Mixtures of Two Plant Species
Species abundances (evenness or identity of the dominant species in mixtures) usually are not rigorously controlled when testing relationships between plant production and species richness and may be highly dynamic in disturbed or early successional communities. Changes in species abundances may affect the yield of mixtures relative to yields expected from species monocultures [the net biodiversity effect (NBE)] by changing how species that differ in function are distributed in the plant community. To test the prediction that variation in species abundances affects the NBE via changes in the expression of functional differences among species (the complementarity effect), we grew perennial grasses and forbs in field plots in central Texas, USA, as equal-density monocultures and two-species mixtures in which relative abundances of species were varied. Function should differ more consistently between species of different growth forms than of the same growth form. We predicted, therefore, that the complementarity effect and influence of species abundances on the NBE would be more pronounced in grass/forb mixtures than in mixtures with species of the same growth form (grass/grass and forb/forb mixtures). The NBE varied with species evenness in two of the six species pairs studied and with identity of the dominant species in a third species combination. The NBE was sensitive to species proportions in both grass/grass and grass/forb assemblages. In all combinations in which the NBE differed with either evenness or identity of the dominant species, the variation resulted largely from change in the complementarity effect. Our results suggest that the NBE of mixtures is sensitive to effects of species ratios on complementarity
The skin-graft reaction as a measure of genetic diversity in chicks
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1960 P5
Using a whole person approach to support people with cancer: a longitudinal, mixed methods service evaluation
Introduction: Improved models of care are needed to meet all the support needs of people with cancer, which encompass psychological, emotional, physical, spiritual, sexual, occupational, social and existential needs. The aim of this paper is to (1) evaluate short and long-term impacts of using a whole person approach to support people with cancer on the Living Well with the Impact of Cancer Course (LWC); (2) use these data to inform strategic decisions about future service provision at Penny Brohn UK.
Methods: Longitudinal mixed-methods service evaluation (n=135). Data collected included health related quality of life (HRQoL) (FACIT-SpEx); Concerns (types and severity - MYCaW); lifestyle behaviour (bespoke questionnaire) and participantsâ experiences over 12 months post course.
Results: Statistically and clinically significant improvements from baseline - 12 months in severity of MYCaW Concerns (n=64; p<0.000) and mean total HRQoL (n=66; p<0.000). The majority of MYCaW concerns were âpsychological and emotionalâ and about participantsâ wellbeing. Spiritual, emotional and functional wellbeing contributed most to HRQoL improvements at 12 months. Barriers to maintaining healthy lifestyle changes included lack of support from family and friends, time constraints, and returning to work. 3-6 months post-course was identified as the time when more support was most likely to be needed.
Conclusions: Using a whole person approach for the LWC enabled the needs of participants to be met, and statistically and clinically significant improvements in HRQoL and MYCaW Concerns were reported. Qualitative data analysis explored how experiencing whole person support enabled participants to make and sustain healthy lifestyle changes associated with improved survivorship. Barriers experienced to making health behaviour change were also identified. These data then informed wider and more person-centred clinical provision to increase the maintenance of positive long-term behaviour changes. Comparison of whole person approaches to cancer treatment and support and standard care are now urgently needed
The Responsiveness, Content Validity, and Convergent Validity of the Measure Yourself Concerns and Wellbeing (MYCaW) Patient-Reported Outcome Measure
Objective
Measure Yourself Concerns and Wellbeing (MYCaW) is a patient-centred questionnaire that allows cancer patients to identify and quantify the severity of their âConcernsâ and Wellbeing, as opposed to using a pre-determined list. MYCaW administration is brief and aids in prioritising treatment approaches. Our goal was to assess the convergent validity and responsiveness of MYCaW scores over time, the generalisability of the existing qualitative coding framework in different complementary and integrative healthcare settings and content validity.
Methods
Baseline and 6-week follow-up data (n=82) from MYCaW and FACIT-SpEx questionnaires were collected for a service evaluation of the âLiving Well With The Impact of Cancerâ course at Penny Brohn Cancer Care. MYCaW construct validity was determined using Spearman's Rank Correlation test, and responsiveness indices assessed score changes over time. The existing qualitative coding framework was reviewed using a new dataset (n=158) and coverage of concern categories compared to items of existing outcome measures.
Results
Good correlation between MYCaW and FACIT-SpEx score changes were achieved (r= -0.57, pâ„0.01). MYCaW Profile and Concern scores were highly responsive to change: SRM=1.02 and 1.08; effect size=1.26 and 1.22. MYCaW change scores showed the anticipated gradient of change according to clinically relevant degrees of change. Categories including âSpiritualityâ, âweight changeâ and âpractical concernsâ were added to the coding framework to improve generalisability.
Conclusions
MYCaW scores were highly responsive to change, allowing personalized patient outcomes to be quantified; the qualitative coding framework is generalisable across different oncology settings and has broader coverage of patient-identified concerns compared with existing cancer-related patient-reported outcome measures
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Free HIV Antiretroviral Therapy Enhances Adherence among Individuals on Stable Treatment: Implications for Potential Shortfalls in Free Antiretroviral Therapy
Objective: To estimate the population-level causal effect of source of payment for HIV medication on treatment adherence using Marginal Structural Models. Methods: Data were obtained from an observational cohort of 76 HIV-infected individuals with at least 24 weeks of antiretroviral therapy treatment from 2002 to 2007 in Kampala, Uganda. Adherence was the primary outcome and it was measured using the 30-day visual analogue scale. Marginal structural models (MSM) were used to estimate the effect of source of payment for HIV medication on adherence, adjusting for confounding by income, duration on antiretroviral therapy (ART), timing of visit, prior adherence, prior CD4+ T cell count and prior plasma HIV RNA. Traditional association models were also examined and the results compared. Results: Free HIV treatment was associated with a 3.8% improvement in adherence in the marginal structural model, while the traditional statistical models showed a 3.1â3.3% improvement in adherence associated with free HIV treatment. Conclusion: Removing a financial barrier to treatment with ART by providing free HIV treatment appears to significantly improve adherence to antiretroviral therapy. With sufficient information on confounders, MSMs can be used to make robust inferences about causal effects in epidemiologic research
Monte Carlo Simulation Calculation of Critical Coupling Constant for Continuum \phi^4_2
We perform a Monte Carlo simulation calculation of the critical coupling
constant for the continuum {\lambda \over 4} \phi^4_2 theory. The critical
coupling constant we obtain is [{\lambda \over \mu^2}]_crit=10.24(3).Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, LaTe
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