Searched for: person:vr31
Patient reports of symptoms and their treatment at three palliative care projects servicing individuals with HIV/AIDS
Karus, Daniel; Raveis, Victoria H; Alexander, Carla; Hanna, Barbara; Selwyn, Peter; Marconi, Katherine; Higginson, Irene
Self-reports of 32 symptoms and their treatments were obtained from patients of three palliative care programs that provide services to seriously ill HIV patients (>or=95% AIDS) in Alabama (n=47), Baltimore (n=91), and New York City (n=117). On average, patients reported 10.9 (SD=7.6) to 12.7 (SD=6.2) symptoms. Pain, lack of energy, and worrying were reported by a majority of patients at all sites, often with a high level of associated distress. For only four symptoms (pain, nausea, difficulty swallowing, and mouth sores) did half or more of patients at all sites experiencing the symptom also report treatment. Less than a third of patients experiencing 12 symptoms (five of six comprising a psychological subscale) reported treatment. Results show that despite the availability of more efficacious treatments, many HIV/AIDS patients continue to experience significant physical and psychological symptomatology. Many of those experiencing symptoms, however, do not perceive their symptoms as being treated.
PMID: 16310615
ISSN: 0885-3924
CID: 160841
Access and equity in HIV/AIDS palliative care: a review of the evidence and responses
Harding, Richard; Easterbrook, Philippa; Higginson, Irene J; Karus, Dan; Raveis, Victoria H; Marconi, Katherine
The high prevalence of pain and other symptoms throughout the HIV disease trajectory, the need for management of side effects related to antiretroviral therapy, the continuing incidence of cancers and new emerging co-morbidities as a result of extended life expectancy under new therapeutic regimes, and the ongoing need for terminal care all prove the curative versus palliative dichotomy to be inappropriate. Although there is evidence for both need and effectiveness of palliative care in HIV patient care, access is often poor and care less than optimal. This review aimed to identify evidence of barriers and inequalities in HIV palliative care in order to inform policy and service development. Biomedical databases were searched using a specific strategy, and evidence extracted into the barrier and inequity categories of patient, clinician, service and disease factors. A model of the barriers and inequalities is presented from the evidence. Recommendations are made from the evidence for promoting access and outcomes through integrated palliative care from diagnosis to end-of-life, alongside antiretroviral therapy when initiated. Service responses that have attempted to increase access to palliative care are presented.
PMID: 15920940
ISSN: 0269-2163
CID: 160842
Does palliative care improve outcomes for patients with HIV/AIDS? A systematic review of the evidence
Harding, R; Karus, D; Easterbrook, P; Raveis, V H; Higginson, I J; Marconi, K
BACKGROUND: The need for palliative care in HIV management is underlined by the high prevalence of pain and symptoms, the toxicity, side effects, and virological failure associated with antiretroviral therapy, emergence of co-morbidities, continued high incidence of malignancies, late presentation of people with HIV disease, and the comparatively higher death rates among the infected individuals. METHODS: A systematic review was undertaken to appraise the effect of models of palliative care on patient outcomes. A detailed search strategy was devised and biomedical databases searched using specific terms relevant to models of palliative care. Data from papers that met the inclusion criteria were extracted into common tables, and evidence independently graded using well described hierarchy of evidence. RESULTS: 34 services met the inclusion criteria. Of these, 22 had been evaluated, and the evidence was graded as follows: grade 1 (n = 1); grade 2 (n = 2); grade 3 (n = 7); grade 4 (n = 1); qualitative (n = 6). Services were grouped as: home based care (n = 15); home palliative care/hospice at home (n = 7); hospice inpatient (n = 4); hospital inpatient palliative care (n = 4); specialist AIDS inpatient unit (n = 2); and hospital inpatient and outpatient care (n = 2). The evidence largely demonstrated that home palliative care and inpatient hospice care significantly improved patient outcomes in the domains of pain and symptom control, anxiety, insight, and spiritual wellbeing. CONCLUSIONS: Although the appraisal of evidence found improvements across domains, the current body of evidence suffers from a lack of (quasi) experimental methods and standardised measures. The specialism of palliative care is responding to the clinical evidence that integration into earlier disease stages is necessary. Further studies are needed to both identify feasible methods and evaluate the apparent beneficial effect of palliative care on patient outcomes in the post-HAART era.
PMCID:1763726
PMID: 15681714
ISSN: 1368-4973
CID: 160849
Existential plight of adult daughters following their mother's breast cancer diagnosis
Raveis, Victoria H; Pretter, Sheindy
Daughters caring for a mother with breast cancer represent a vulnerable population. They are confronted with having to integrate their emotional reactions to their mother's illness while simultaneously processing concerns about their own personal susceptibility. Through their caregiving, daughters obtain intimate knowledge of their mother's breast cancer experience. As part of a study of breast cancer survivorship and the family, in-depth interviews were conducted with a diverse sample of adult daughters caring for their mother with breast cancer. Analysis of the daughters' narratives documents that their mother's cancer diagnosis subjects them to a period of crisis fraught with severe emotional distress and life and death concerns that parallels the 'existential plight' that patients encounter following the cancer diagnosis and inception of treatment. Specifically, the daughters' accounts demonstrate that the diagnosis intensified their bond with their ill mother, while also presenting challenges in their relationship. It precipitated a re-definition of personal values and altered their perceived future. Their mother's illness prompted recognition of increased family risk and rendered daughters with a heightened sense of personal vulnerability. Clinicians need to appreciate the extent to which daughters can be impacted by their mother's cancer experience.
PMID: 15386788
ISSN: 1057-9249
CID: 160844
Evaluation of a preventive intervention for bereaved children
Christ, Grace H; Raveis, Victoria H; Seigel, Karolynn; Karus, Daniel; Christ, Adolph E
One hundred eighty four families completed a twelve month parent-guidance (experimental) or a parent telephone-monitoring (comparison) intervention initiated during one parent's terminal cancer illness and continued until six months after the death. Children in the parent-guidance intervention reported greater reduction in trait anxiety and greater improvement in their perceptions of the surviving parent's competence and communication, a primary goal of the intervention. Identified problems in implementing evaluations of experimental interventions with bereaved children include the following: (1) Available and commonly used standardized psychopathology measures do not adequately capture changes in non-psychopathological but bereaved distressed, grieving children and adolescents. (2) Experimental and control samples usually have very few children with psychopathology (scores). Relatively small changes in scores within the normal range may be insufficient to allow measurement of meaningful differences between interventions. (3) Both experimental and control interventions must provide sufficient help to retain families for later evaluation. The level of general support and referral for other treatments, if adequately done, may be sufficient to blur differences in standardized psychopathology measure scores between any two interventions. It may only be in the specifically targeted intervention area that differences can be expected to be significant in adequately resourced families.
PMID: 17387069
ISSN: 1552-4264
CID: 160843
Mental health status of clients from three HIV/AIDS palliative care projects
Karus, Daniel; Raveis, Victoria H; Marconi, Katherine; Selwyn, Peter; Alexander, Carla; Hanna, Barbara; Higginson, Irene J
OBJECTIVE: To describe mental health status and its correlates among clients of three palliative care programs targeting underserved populations. METHODS: Mental Health Inventory (MHI-5) scores of clients from programs in Alabama (n = 39), Baltimore (n = 57), and New York City (n = 84) were compared. RESULTS: Mean MHI-5 scores did not differ among sites and were indicative of poor mental health. Significant differences were noted among sites with regard to client sociodemographics, physical functioning, and perceptions of interpersonal relations. Results of multivariate regression models estimated for each site suggest variation in the relative importance of potential predictors among sites. Whereas poorer mental health was primarily associated with history of drug dependence at Baltimore and more physical symptomatology at New York, better mental health was most strongly correlated with more positive perceptions of interpersonal relationships at Baltimore and increasing age and more positive perceptions of meaning and purpose in life at New York. SIGNIFICANCE OF RESULTS: The data presented suggest the importance of assessing clients' history of and current need for mental health services. Evidence of a relationship between positive perceptions of meaning and purpose and better psychological function underscores the importance of existential issues for the overall well-being of those who are seriously ill.
PMID: 16594242
ISSN: 1478-9515
CID: 160845
Service needs of patients with advanced HIV disease: a comparison of client and staff reports at three palliative care projects
Karus, Daniel; Raveis, Victoria H; Marconi, Katherine; Hanna, Barbara; Selwyn, Peter; Alexander, Carla; Perrone, Margaret; Higginson, Irene
Despite prolonged survival and improved quality of life as a result of treatment advances for HIV/AIDS, thousands still suffer with the disease and 15-16,000 a year die in the United States alone. Little is known about those patients with HIV/AIDS who still require palliative care services or the types of services needed. This paper describes the program elements and clients of three programs providing palliative care to persons with HIV/AIDS in Alabama (n = 41), Baltimore, Maryland, (n = 55), and New York City (n = 52). Also presented are the prevalence of need for 27 services as assessed by clients and staff, the level of agreement found between client and staff assessments at each site, and services for which prevalence of need varied among programs. Interviews were conducted between June 2000 and October 2002. The majority of clients at all programs were socioeconomically disadvantaged, persons of color, and had a history of substance abuse, although significant differences were noted in the distributions of clients at each program with regard to these characteristics. Greater differences were observed among programs in the prevalence of need reported than were found between reports of clients and staff at the same program. Despite these differences, a common set of medical (ambulatory/outpatient care, laboratory testing, pharmacy) and ancillary (nutritional counseling, transportation) services was identified by at least 25% of clients and staff at each program. These findings suggest that need, beyond a core of medical and ancillary services, is relative and best conceptualized as a mixture of need, demand, and supply. The need for a mix of "care" and "cure" services identified reflect the erratic disease trajectory experienced by some clients who move in and out of treatment as well as the vulnerability and marginalized lives of the clients served by these programs.
PMID: 15104875
ISSN: 1087-2914
CID: 160846
Impact of cancer caregiving over the disease course: Depressive distress in adult daughters [Meeting Abstract]
Raveis, VH; Karus, D; Pretter, S
ISI:000188425000091
ISSN: 1057-9249
CID: 1555572
Breast cancer and the aging family: Psychosocial issues and challenges facing adult daughters [Meeting Abstract]
Raveis, VH; Pretter, S; Carrero, M; Sapienza, T
ISI:000188425000013
ISSN: 1057-9249
CID: 1870652
Disease management of older persons with diabetes: Perspectives on self-care and familial caregiving [Meeting Abstract]
Raveis, V; Carrero, M; Catz, D; Tobin, J
ISI:000225458801518
ISSN: 0016-9013
CID: 1870592