| Literature DB >> 31919786 |
Stina Järvholm1, Petrea Ericson2, Marita Gilljam2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Anxiety and depression are common among adults with cystic fibrosis (CF), and the International Committee on Mental Health in CF (ICMH) recommends annual screening for mental health problems. We implemented screening according to the recently published guidelines and assessed the results from the first year, as well as the patients' attitude to annual screeningEntities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Cystic fibrosis; Depression; Patient acceptance of health care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31919786 PMCID: PMC7253508 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-020-02417-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Screening results
| Total | Women | Men | < 30 years | ≥ 30 years | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | 47* | 52 | 52* | 47 | |
| Scoring | |||||
| GAD-7 | 3 (0–19) | 3 (0–19) | 2.5 (0–18) | 3 (0–19)** | 2 (0–18) |
| PHQ-9 | 3 (0–21) | 4 (0–20) | 3 (0–21) | 3.5 (0–21) | 3 (0–18) |
Data are presented in median (range)
GAD Generalized Anxiety Disorder, 7-items, score 0–21. PHQ Patient Health Questionnaire, 9-items, score 0–27
*One young female was excluded from analysis due to multiple unanswered items
**Age group comparison, Mann–Whitney test, p = 0.02
Fig. 1Patients’ evaluation of screening process
Patients’ evaluation of screening process
| Response | Yes | No | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Where there any questions that were difficult to answer? | All | 98 | 29 (30%) | 69 (70%) |
| ≥ 30 years | 47 | 12 (26%) | 35 (75%) | |
| < 30 years | 51 | 17 (33%) | 34 (67%) | |
| Do you think that it is good to answer these questions by questionnaires | All | 95 | 79 (83%) | 16 (17%) |
| ≥ 30 years | 46 | 41 (89%) | 5 (11%) | |
| < 30 years | 49 | 38 (78%) | 11 (22%) |
One hundred adult CF patients (52 men/48 women, 53 < 30 years of age) were asked to complete a three-question evaluation form directly after completing GAD-7 and PHQ-9. Nine patients left 11 questions unanswered. Data are presented as numbers and percent of responding patients