• Psycho-oncology · Jul 2010

    Validity, reliability and clinical feasibility of a Needs Assessment Tool for people with progressive cancer.

    • Amy Waller, Afaf Girgis, Christophe Lecathelinais, Wendy Scott, Lorna Foot, David Sibbritt, David Currow, and Palliative Care Research Program team.
    • Centre for Health Research & Psycho-oncology, School of Medicine & Public Health, The Cancer Council NSW, University of Newcastle & Hunter Medical Research Institute, Newcastle, NSW, Australia. amy.waller@newcastle.edu.au
    • Psychooncology. 2010 Jul 1;19(7):726-33.

    BackgroundNeeds assessment is a valuable approach for determining the way health and social services allocate resources to people with cancer and their caregivers.AimTo assess the reliability, validity and acceptability of a Needs Assessment Tool (NAT) in a palliative care clinical setting.MethodsPsychometric properties of the NAT were initially explored in a pilot study involving filmed simulated advanced cancer patient and caregiver consultations. Further testing was undertaken in a clinical setting to determine the inter-rater reliability, validity and feasibility of the NAT.ResultsThe results of the pilot study suggested good reliability and acceptability in a simulated setting. Further testing indicated that the patient daily living item was positively correlated with the Resource Utilisation Groups-Activities of Daily Living (r=0.74) and negatively correlated with the Australian Karnofsky Performance Scale (r=-0.84). Prevalence- and bias-adjusted kappa values also indicated adequate agreement between Palliative Care Problem Severity Score items and the patient physical item (0.48), psychological item (0.45) and caregiver well-being item (0.42).ConclusionsNeeds assessment not only facilitates the identification of people who have specific concerns or are dissatisfied with some aspect of their care, but also determines the person's desire for assistance and involvement with services. The NAT is a highly acceptable and efficient tool that can be used by health professionals with a range of clinical expertise to identify individuals' needs, thereby enabling a better match of interventions of specialist services more closely linked to needs.Copyright (c) 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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