| Literature DB >> 25403357 |
Hans E Kortrijk1, Astrid M Kamperman, Cornelis L Mulder.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is largely unknown which unmet needs in the Camberwell Assessment of Need Short Appraisal Schedule (CANSAS) need to be resolved in order to improve a patients' subjective quality of life (QoL). We therefore investigated the pattern of individual unmet needs over time and its relation to QoL over time.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25403357 PMCID: PMC4236799 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-014-0306-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Figure 1Outcome on quality of life, a combination of SEM and CS cut-off.
Legend: The horizontal axis represents the baseline Quality of Life (QoL) total score and the vertical axis represents the follow up QoL total score. Each data point represents the combination of the baseline and follow-up QoL total score and illustrates if QoL improves, stabilizes, or worsens over time. The horizontal line represents the clinical significance cut-off between low level of QoL and high level of QoL at follow-up. The diagonal lines represent meaningful change in QoL total score.
Linear regression analysis of Quality of Life scores at follow-up
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| 19.59 | 1.802 |
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| -.96 | .17 | -.418 |
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| .479 | .051 | .533 |
| .378 - .58 |
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| 2.166 | .315 | 1.02 |
| 1.546 - 2.786 |
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| -.047 | .012 | -.512 |
| -.071 - -.023 |
Quality of Life (QoL); ^positive change indicates fewer needs at follow-up; R2: .423; F (df = 4, df = 246) = 45.148, p < .001.
Correlation between outcome in individual CANSAS items (range 1–4: very poor to very good) and outcome in QoL (range 1–4: very poor to very good)
| 1. accommodation | .13* |
| 2. food | -.004 |
| 3. looking after the home | .034 |
| 4. self-care | .147* |
| 5. daytime activities | .165** |
| 6. physical health | .031 |
| 7. psychotic symptoms | .137* |
| 8. information | .085 |
| 9. psychological distress | .11 |
| 10. safety to self | .102 |
| 11. safety to others | -.057 |
| 12. alcohol | .042 |
| 13. drugs | .036 |
| 14. company | .148* |
| 15. intimate relationships | .072 |
| 16. sexual expression | .002 |
| 17. childcare | -.087 |
| 18. basic education | -.063 |
| 19. telephone | .092 |
| 20. transport | .055 |
| 21. money | .125* |
| 22. benefits | .063 |
*Correlation is significant at the 0.05 level (2-tailed). **Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed).
Ordinal regression analysis of the relation between outcome in QoL and outcome in individual unmet needs
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| Thresholds | Qol 1: very poor | 4.043 | 2.553 | .136 | 0.644 | 25.383 |
| Qol 2: fair to poor | 25.504 | 2.602 | .001 | 3.914 | 166.174 | |
| Qol 3: good | 85.153 | 2.646 | .000 | 12.649 | 573.268 | |
| Qol 4: very good | - | - | - | - | ||
| CANSAS* | 1. accommodation | 1.278 | 1.128 | .042 | 1.009 | 1.618 |
| 4. self-care | 1.292 | 1.211 | .182 | 0.887 | 1.88 | |
| 5. daytime activities | 1.216 | 1.107 | .054 | 0.997 | 1.483 | |
| 7. psychotic symptoms | 1.217 | 1.183 | .243 | 0.875 | 1.693 | |
| 14. Company | 1.151 | 1.101 | .144 | 0.953 | 1.39 | |
*Pseudo R-Square (Nagelkerke) = .075; Goodness-of-Fit Pearson Chi-Square = 288.828. df = 265. p = .151.
CANSAS items 10 and 21 were excluded form the modeling process.
**The parameter estimates represent the ratio of the odds for very poor to very good QoL outcome (range 1–4) and for very poor to very good outcome on individual CANSAS items (range 1–4).
A ratio above 1.0 means that better outcome on CANSAS items increases the odds of better QoL over time.