1. Mental healthcare utilization among head and neck cancer patients: A longitudinal cohort study.
- Author
-
Jansen F, Lissenberg-Witte BI, Hardillo JA, Takes RP, de Bree R, Lamers F, Langendijk JA, Leemans CR, and Verdonck-de Leeuw IM
- Subjects
- Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Cohort Studies, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, Quality of Life psychology, Head and Neck Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate utilization of mental healthcare among head and neck cancer (HNC) patients from diagnosis to 2 years after treatment, in relation to psychological symptoms, mental disorders, need for mental healthcare, and sociodemographic, clinical and personal factors., Methods: Netherlands Quality of life and Biomedical Cohort study data as measured before treatment, at 3 and 6 months, and at 1 and 2 years after treatment was used (n = 610). Data on mental healthcare utilization (iMCQ), psychological symptoms (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Cancer Worry Scale), mental disorders (CIDI interview), need for mental healthcare (Supportive Care Needs Survey Short-Form 34, either as continuous outcome indicating the level of need or dichotomized into unmet need (yes/no)) and several sociodemographic, clinical and personal factors were collected. Factors associated with mental healthcare utilization were investigated using generalized estimating equations (p < 0.05)., Results: Of all HNC patients, 5%-9% used mental healthcare per timepoint. This was 4%-14% in patients with mild-severe psychological symptoms, 4%-17% in patients with severe psychological symptoms, 15%-35% in patients with a mental disorder and 5%-16% in patients with an unmet need for mental healthcare. Among all patients, higher symptoms of anxiety, a higher need for mental healthcare, lower age, higher disease stage, lower self-efficacy and higher social support seeking were significantly associated with mental healthcare utilization., Conclusion: Mental health care utilization among HNC patients is limited, and is related to psychological symptoms, need for mental healthcare, and sociodemographic, clinical and personal factors., (© 2023 The Authors. Psycho-Oncology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF