Psychosocial Evaluation (psychosocial + evaluation)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Psychological Symptoms Are Greater in Caregivers of Patients on Hemodialysis Than Those of Peritoneal Dialysis

HEMODIALYSIS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 4 2003
M. Tugrul Sezer
Background:,The purpose of this study was to evaluate and compare psychosocial characteristics in caregiving relatives (caregivers) of hemodialysis (HD) and peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients. Methods:,Thirty-three caregivers (17 women, 16 men) of HD patients, 27 caregivers (11 women, 16 men) of PD patients, and a control group of 49 subjects who do not care for family members with chronic illness (23 women, 26 men) are included in this study. The brief symptom inventory (BSI), social disability schedule (SDS), and brief disability questionnaire (BDQ) were used for the psychosocial evaluation. Results:,The mean age, men-to-women ratios, duration of education, and distribution of marital status did not differ significantly among the three groups. In addition, dialysis duration and distribution of caregiver type were not different between the HD and PD groups. Although the mean global severity index scores of the three groups were similar, somatization and depression scores from BSI subitems were greater in the HD group than the scores of the PD and control groups. Although the mean SDS and BDQ scores were higher in the HD group, the differences did not achieve statistical significance. BSI subitems such as somatization, obsession,compulsion, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, and anxiety were positively correlated among themselves. Hostility and somatization were negatively correlated with age and education, respectively. Nevertheless, somatization was positively correlated with age. Social disability was negatively correlated with duration of education. Conclusion:,Somatization and depression are greater in the caregivers of center HD patients compared to PD and control groups. According to the findings of this study, we suggest that caregiving family members of dialysis patients especially on HD also should be evaluated for psychosocial problems and supported as needed. Further studies are needed to explore whether psychosocial parameters of caregivers predict outcomes for caregivers and patients. [source]


Association of parental pretransplant psychosocial assessment with post-transplant morbidity in pediatric heart transplant recipients,

PEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 5 2006
David Stone
Abstract:, Because parents assume the primary responsibility for providing ambulatory post-transplant care to pediatric patients, pretransplant psychosocial evaluation in these recipients is usually focused on parents rather than on patients themselves. We sought to determine whether pretransplant parental psychosocial evaluation predicts post-transplant medical outcome at current levels of psychosocial support. We compared relative risk (RR) of rejection and hospitalizations (days of all-cause hospitalization) following initial discharge in patients in ,risk' and ,control' groups defined by their pretransplant parental psychosocial evaluation. We also compared the two groups of patients for the proportion of all outpatient trough cyclosporine A (CSA) or tacrolimus (FK) levels that were <50% of the target level (defined as the mid-therapeutic range level). There were seven patients in the ,risk' group with a median age 0.25 yr (range 0.19,14.7 yr) and total follow up 20.5 patient-yr. There were 21 patients in the ,control' groups with a median age of 2.1 yr (range 0.05,16.2 yr) and total follow up of 71.3 patient-yr. There was no significant difference between the groups in rejection-risk or days of all-cause hospitalization early after transplant (first six months). During the late period (after the first six months), there were 11 rejection episodes in the ,risk' group over 17.4 patient-yr and four rejection episodes in control group over 61.8 patient-yr of follow up. After adjustment for age and race, patients in the ,risk' category had a RR of 3.4 for developing a rejection episode (p = 0.06) and 3.1 for being inpatient (p < 0.001) during the late period. Patients in the risk group were 2.9 times more likely to have subtherapeutic trough levels (<50% target level) of calcineurin inhibitor (CSA or FK) during both early and late periods (p < 0.01 for both periods) after adjustment for patient age and race. We conclude that pretransplant parental psychosocial risk assessment is associated with post-transplant morbidity in children after cardiac transplantation. These patients may benefit from closer outpatient monitoring and a higher level of psychosocial support. [source]


Non-adherence to medications following pediatric liver transplantation

PEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 6 2004
Eyal Shemesh
Abstract:, Non-adherence to medications is a leading cause of organ loss and morbidity in children and adolescents who had a liver transplant. Yet there are very few published studies about ways to detect whether patients are taking their medications or not, and about treatment options to improve adherence. The Pediatric Liver/Liver Transplant Program at Mount Sinai developed clinical and research programs that evaluate adherence. We review initial results from these programs. Clinic patients participate in an adherence-monitoring program that involves standardized assessments by patients, parents, clinicians, and routine examinations of medication blood levels. A research program adds an electronic monitoring device (MEMS-capsİ, AARDEX/APREX, Switzerland) and examines the use of azathioprine metabolites as predictors for non-adherence. Patients receive a thorough psychosocial evaluation to identify potential risk factors for non-adherence. Preliminary results indicate that an objective adherence detection method has to be incorporated into practice if non-adherence is to be reliably detected (clinicians' impressions and patients' reports are not sufficient). A risk factor for non-adhernce, post-traumatic stress disorder, emerges as a potential target for intervention. It is possible to integrate a formal mechanism to assess adherence into the work of a liver/liver transplant clinic. We hope that the presented program will inspire clinicians in the community and other programs to regard the assessment and improvement of adherence to medications as an important goal in the management of children who had a transplant. [source]


Evaluating Living Kidney Donors: Relationship Types, Psychosocial Criteria, and Consent Processes at US Transplant Programs

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 10 2007
J. R. Rodrigue
We conducted a survey of 132 US kidney transplant programs to examine how they evaluate and select potential living kidney donors, focusing on donor-recipient relationships, psychosocial criteria, and consent processes. There is heterogeneity in donor-recipient relationships that are considered acceptable, although most programs (70%) will not consider publicly solicited donors. Most programs (75%) require a psychosocial evaluation for all potential living donors. Most programs agree that knowledge of financial reward (90%), active substance abuse (86%), and active mental health problems (76%) are absolute contraindications to donation. However, there is greater variability in how other psychosocial issues are considered in the selection process. Consent processes are highly variable across programs: donor and recipient consent for the donor evaluation is presumed in 57% and 76% of programs, respectively. The use of 13 different informed consent elements varied from 65% (alternative donation procedures) to 86% (description of evaluation, surgery and recuperative period) of programs. Forty-three percent use a ,cooling off' period. Findings demonstrate high variability in current practice regarding acceptable donor-recipient relationships, psychosocial criteria, and consent processes. Whether greater consensus should be reached on these donor evaluation practices, especially in the context of more expansive use of living donor kidney transplantation, is discussed. [source]