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Pre-Surgery Depression and Confidence to Manage Problems Predict Recovery Trajectories of Health and Wellbeing in the First Two Years following Colorectal Cancer: Results from the CREW Cohort Study

Claire Foster, Joanne Haviland, Jane Winter, Chloe Grimmett, Kim Chivers Seymour, Lynn Batehup, Lynn Calman, Jessica Corner, Amy Din, Deborah Fenlon, Christine M. May, Alison Richardson, Peter W. Smith, (Members of the Study Advisory Committee)

PLOS ONE, Volume: 11, Issue: 5, Start page: e0155434

Swansea University Author: Deborah Fenlon

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Abstract

PurposeThis paper identifies predictors of recovery trajectories of quality of life (QoL), health statusand personal wellbeing in the two years following colorectal cancer surgery.Methods872 adults receiving curative intent surgery during November 2010 to March 2012. Questionnairesat baseline, 3, 9,...

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Published in: PLOS ONE
ISSN: 1932-6203
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa32825
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spelling 2020-12-17T08:04:24.3090810 v2 32825 2017-03-30 Pre-Surgery Depression and Confidence to Manage Problems Predict Recovery Trajectories of Health and Wellbeing in the First Two Years following Colorectal Cancer: Results from the CREW Cohort Study efa6c181fe0a6e5c923b1126ce469186 Deborah Fenlon Deborah Fenlon true false 2017-03-30 FGMHL PurposeThis paper identifies predictors of recovery trajectories of quality of life (QoL), health statusand personal wellbeing in the two years following colorectal cancer surgery.Methods872 adults receiving curative intent surgery during November 2010 to March 2012. Questionnairesat baseline, 3, 9, 15, 24 months post-surgery assessed QoL, health status, wellbeing,confidence to manage illness-related problems (self-efficacy), social support, comorbidities,socio-demographic, clinical and treatment characteristics. Group-based trajectoryanalyses identified distinct trajectories and predictors for QoL, health status andwellbeing.ResultsFour recovery trajectories were identified for each outcome. Groups 1 and 2 fared consistentlywell (scores above/within normal range); 70.5%of participants for QoL, 33.3% healthstatus, 77.6%wellbeing. Group 3 had some problems (24.2% QoL, 59.3% health, 18.2%wellbeing); Group 4 fared consistently poorly (5.3% QoL, 7.4% health, 4.2% wellbeing).Higher pre-surgery depression and lower self-efficacy were significantly associated withpoorer trajectories for all three outcomes after adjusting for other important predictorsincluding disease characteristics, stoma, anxiety and social support. Journal Article PLOS ONE 11 5 e0155434 Public Library of Science (PLoS) 1932-6203 12 5 2016 2016-05-12 10.1371/journal.pone.0155434 COLLEGE NANME Medicine, Health and Life Science - Faculty COLLEGE CODE FGMHL Swansea University 2020-12-17T08:04:24.3090810 2017-03-30T14:26:14.0114185 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Nursing Claire Foster 1 Joanne Haviland 2 Jane Winter 3 Chloe Grimmett 4 Kim Chivers Seymour 5 Lynn Batehup 6 Lynn Calman 7 Jessica Corner 8 Amy Din 9 Deborah Fenlon 10 Christine M. May 11 Alison Richardson 12 Peter W. Smith 13 (Members of the Study Advisory Committee) 14 0032825-30032017152453.PDF PLOSonev2.PDF 2017-03-30T15:24:53.7670000 Output 940669 application/pdf Version of Record true Released under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY). true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title Pre-Surgery Depression and Confidence to Manage Problems Predict Recovery Trajectories of Health and Wellbeing in the First Two Years following Colorectal Cancer: Results from the CREW Cohort Study
spellingShingle Pre-Surgery Depression and Confidence to Manage Problems Predict Recovery Trajectories of Health and Wellbeing in the First Two Years following Colorectal Cancer: Results from the CREW Cohort Study
Deborah Fenlon
title_short Pre-Surgery Depression and Confidence to Manage Problems Predict Recovery Trajectories of Health and Wellbeing in the First Two Years following Colorectal Cancer: Results from the CREW Cohort Study
title_full Pre-Surgery Depression and Confidence to Manage Problems Predict Recovery Trajectories of Health and Wellbeing in the First Two Years following Colorectal Cancer: Results from the CREW Cohort Study
title_fullStr Pre-Surgery Depression and Confidence to Manage Problems Predict Recovery Trajectories of Health and Wellbeing in the First Two Years following Colorectal Cancer: Results from the CREW Cohort Study
title_full_unstemmed Pre-Surgery Depression and Confidence to Manage Problems Predict Recovery Trajectories of Health and Wellbeing in the First Two Years following Colorectal Cancer: Results from the CREW Cohort Study
title_sort Pre-Surgery Depression and Confidence to Manage Problems Predict Recovery Trajectories of Health and Wellbeing in the First Two Years following Colorectal Cancer: Results from the CREW Cohort Study
author_id_str_mv efa6c181fe0a6e5c923b1126ce469186
author_id_fullname_str_mv efa6c181fe0a6e5c923b1126ce469186_***_Deborah Fenlon
author Deborah Fenlon
author2 Claire Foster
Joanne Haviland
Jane Winter
Chloe Grimmett
Kim Chivers Seymour
Lynn Batehup
Lynn Calman
Jessica Corner
Amy Din
Deborah Fenlon
Christine M. May
Alison Richardson
Peter W. Smith
(Members of the Study Advisory Committee)
format Journal article
container_title PLOS ONE
container_volume 11
container_issue 5
container_start_page e0155434
publishDate 2016
institution Swansea University
issn 1932-6203
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0155434
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Health and Social Care - Nursing{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Nursing
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description PurposeThis paper identifies predictors of recovery trajectories of quality of life (QoL), health statusand personal wellbeing in the two years following colorectal cancer surgery.Methods872 adults receiving curative intent surgery during November 2010 to March 2012. Questionnairesat baseline, 3, 9, 15, 24 months post-surgery assessed QoL, health status, wellbeing,confidence to manage illness-related problems (self-efficacy), social support, comorbidities,socio-demographic, clinical and treatment characteristics. Group-based trajectoryanalyses identified distinct trajectories and predictors for QoL, health status andwellbeing.ResultsFour recovery trajectories were identified for each outcome. Groups 1 and 2 fared consistentlywell (scores above/within normal range); 70.5%of participants for QoL, 33.3% healthstatus, 77.6%wellbeing. Group 3 had some problems (24.2% QoL, 59.3% health, 18.2%wellbeing); Group 4 fared consistently poorly (5.3% QoL, 7.4% health, 4.2% wellbeing).Higher pre-surgery depression and lower self-efficacy were significantly associated withpoorer trajectories for all three outcomes after adjusting for other important predictorsincluding disease characteristics, stoma, anxiety and social support.
published_date 2016-05-12T03:40:21Z
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