Quality of life research : an international journal of quality of life aspects of treatment, care and rehabilitation
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We reviewed our experience with spinal cord stimulation (SCS) in treating 116 patients with pain in one or both legs. All these patients were selected for an initial week of trial stimulation by the criteria: pain due to a known benign organic cause, failure of conventional pain control methods and absence of major personality disorders. Selected patients included 78 with the Failed Back Surgery Syndrome (FBSS), in whom proven correlation existed between the clinical picture and the neuroradiological and electromyogram abnormalities. ⋯ Seventy-seven patients (91%) were able to reduce their medication intake and 50 patients (60%) reported an improvement in lifestyle. FBSS patients responded more positively to the trial stimulation than the other patients. However, the later outcome was not affected by patient selection as long-term benefit was similar in all definitive SCS patients irrespective of aetiology.
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To develop and evaluate the psychometric properties (reliability, validity etc.) of a comprehensive Quality of Life (QOL) tool, for patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), that was adapted from a previously validated cancer tool. ⋯ The HOPES is an excellent tool for identifying the problems and needs of patients with HIV infection and for assessing their quality of life. It is reliable, valid and acceptable to patients. The tool may be especially useful in developing a normative data base.
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Nausea and vomiting following chemotherapy administration are common and often overlooked causes of impairment in cancer patients. The goal of this study was to explore the broad range of consequences associated with this specific acute toxicity of chemotherapy. Specific objectives were: (1) create and test scales specifically designed to assess the impact of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting or patients' daily function; (2) examine changes in quality of life of cancer patients 3 days following chemotherapy administration; (3) assess the impact of chemotherapy-induced emesis on quality of life and patients' daily function; (4) identify medical and non-medical cost-related consequences associated with chemotherapy-induced emesis. ⋯ FLIE scores indicated that CIE patients perceived that vomiting, and to a slightly lesser extent, nausea substantively influenced their ability to complete household tasks, enjoy meals, spend time with family and friends, and maintain daily function and recreation. Effect size calculations supported a significant negative relationship between occurrence of CIE and the direction and magnitude of functional living index change. An exploratory analysis (principal component followed by regression analysis) supported the hypothesis that side-effects produced by chemotherapy and antiemetic therapy significantly contributed to changes in quality of life observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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We report the work of two community teams who care for people with AIDS/HIV related illness, the characteristics of patients referred, and the impact of the teams on four aspects of quality of life. Data was collected on 140 patients (85 St. Mary's Home Support Team, 55 Bloomsbury Community Care Team) who were referred to and remained in the care of these teams until death. ⋯ Patient anxiety, also a commonly severe problem at referral, improved significantly throughout care. Pain control was less commonly severe at referral and improved significantly throughout care. Practical aid, in contrast, was rarely a severe problem at any stage of care.