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Original Articles

Psychosocial Intervention for Adults With Cancer: A Meta-Analysis

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Pages 321-347 | Published online: 12 Nov 2009
 

Abstract

Cancer affects a significant number of people and their families. In addition to physical symptoms, people with cancer experience considerable levels of psychosocial distress. Psychosocial oncology has been developed to address this distress. In this meta-analysis, psychosocial interventions for adults with cancer were systematically reviewed. A central finding was the dearth of clinical trials published by social work researchers and clinicians. Small intervention effects were noted for some psychosocial interventions, particularly those in which a focus on stress and coping were included; however, the poor quality of reporting negated conclusive results. The synthesis of research conducted and reported with methodological rigor may inform social work practice, with the ultimate goal of improving the quality of patient care and the quality of patient outcomes. The implications for social work clinicians and researchers are discussed.

Notes

Type of Cancer: 0 = not specified, 1 = breast, 2 = malignant melanoma, 3 = gynecologic, 4 = head and neck, 5 = lung, 6 = lymphoma, 7 = colon, 8 = prostate, 9 = oral, 10 = intestinal, 11 = brain, 12 = Hodgkin disease, 13 = other

*post-baseline (intervention terminated at various times) reported repeated measures;

**post-operation

ES = Effect Size, QRA = Quality Rating Assessment, RCT = Randomized Controlled Trial, SS = Statistically significant, NS = Not significant, NA = Not applicable, NE = Negative effects, NR = Not reported, ND = No data provided to calculate an effect size

‡‡Statistical significance not reported due to small sample size (CitationLev 2001, N = 56; Lev 2000, N = 18)

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