EPIC: Cancer Patients Suffer Needless Pain
EPIC: Cancer Patients Suffer Needless Pain - video, Abstract, link to full-text; Alex DeLuca; War on Doctors/Pain Crisis; Pain Relief Network; 2007-06-25.
The European Prospective Investigation into Cancer (EPIC) survey is the largest study of its kind to investigate the prevalence, impact and treatment of pain in cancer patients, involving 17,777 men and women in Norfolk, England.
The video below is a short, less than 4 minutes, but quietly powerful video featuring Dr. Franco de Conno, director of the European Association for Palliative Care and an eloquent and dignified woman coping with ovarian cancer pain, trying to describe for us what life and death in treatable, but untreated, pain is like. Highly recommended. [the Video:]
Below is an Abstract for this article about the mental health, pain, quality of life and mortality relationships and results in the EPIC study (title links to the full-text PDF): “Self-Reported Mental Health-Related Quality of Life and Mortality in Men and Women in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer (EPIC-Norfolk): A Prospective Population Study” - Mhyint,P.K. et al.; Psychosomatic Medicine 69(5):410-411; 2007 (June).
ABSTRACT:
Objective: To explore the relationship between self-reported mental functional health and mortality.
Methods: Participants included 17,777 men and women aged 40 to 79 years at baseline who lived in Norfolk, UK, and had no known cardiovascular disease or cancer, and completed the anglicized Short Form 36-item questionnaire (UK SF-36) during 1996 to 2000 in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer-Norfolk prospective population study. We examined the relationship between mental functional health derived from the mental component summary scores of the SF-36 and mortality from all causes, cardiovascular disease, cancer, and other causes during an average 6.5-year follow-up.
Results: There were 1065 deaths during a total of 115,550 person-years of follow-up. Impaired mental health-related quality of life was associated with increased risk of all-cause mortality in men and women. A decrease of 1 SD (10 points) in SF-36 mental component summary scores was associated with a 14% increase in all-cause mortality (hazards ratio = 1.14; 95% Confidence Interval: 1.07, 1.21) after controlling for age, gender, body mass index, systolic blood pressure, cholesterol, alcohol consumption, diabetes, smoking, social class, and physical functional health.
Conclusion: Poor self-reported mental functional health is related to increased risk of all-cause mortality in men and women. Interpretation of this association requires further investigation.
Abbreviations:
UK SF-36 = Anglicized version of short form 36-item questionnaire; HRQL = health-related quality of life; MCS = mental component summary; EPIC-Norfolk = European Prospective Investigation into Cancer-Norfolk; BMI = body mass index; HLEQ = Health and Life Experiences Questionnaire; HR = hazards ratio; ICD-9 = Ninth Revision of the International Classification of Diseases; ICD-10 = Tenth Revision of the International Classification of Diseases; PCS = Physical Component Summary.
[END]
Sphere: Related ContentTags: author=deluca, cancer, ethics, opiophobia, pain crisis, public health, statistics














































No Comments »
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
Leave a comment
If you want to leave a feedback to this post or to some other user´s comment, simply fill out the form below.