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Depression, anxiety and stress among patients with hematological malignancies and the association with quality of life: a cross-sectional study

Ioanna V. Papathanasiou, Konstantinos Kelepouris, Chrisoula Valari, Dimitrios Papagiannis, Foteini Tzavella, Lambrini Kourkouta, Konstantinos Tsaras, Εvangelos C. Fradelos

2020Medicine and Pharmacy Reports40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIM: To evaluate psychological distress and quality of life of patients with hematological malignancies, as well as to identify the prognostic factors that aggravate their condition. METHODS: A cross-sectional, descriptive study including 87 patients with Hematological Malignancies was conducted. Data were collected with an anonymous questionnaire consisted by A) a sheet with socio-demographic characteristics, B) the Depression, Stress and Stress Scale (DASS21), and C) World Health Organization Life Quality Scale (WHOQOL - BREF30). The processing and statistical analysis of the empirical material of the research were done using the SPSS (Statistical Package for Social Science) 22.0. RESULTS: The results showed that the age of the sample averaged 71.22 years (SD = 8.71). Regarding their marital status, single mothers were 9.2%, married 62.1%. With regard to disease-related features, 28.7% of patients had Hodgkin's Lymphoma, 27.6% Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia, 27.6% MDL and 16.1% of patients had myelodysplastic syndrome Multiple myeloma. In the investigation of the relationship between the Mental health Scale and the Quality of Life, negative correlations of Depression, Stress, Stress and the total DAS Scale with all dimensions of Patient Quality of Life were found. CONCLUSIONS: Higher levels of psychological distress and poor mental health are associated with a low level of quality of life.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineQuality of life (healthcare)Depression (economics)AnxietyMental healthCross-sectional studyMarital statusPerceived Stress ScaleClinical psychologyDiseaseDistressInternal medicineGerontologyPsychiatryStress (linguistics)Environmental healthPathologyPopulationNursingMacroeconomicsPhilosophyLinguisticsEconomicsCancer survivorship and careWomen's cancer prevention and managementPalliative and Oncologic Care
Depression, anxiety and stress among patients with hematological malignancies and the association with quality of life: a cross-sectional study | Litcius