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RESEARCH: VETERANS WITH CANCER MIGHT FALL UNDER THE
RADAR FOR DEPRESSION -- "When doctors think
patients have a
higher risk of mortality, depression screening is
not as big a focus."

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Story here...
http://www.hbns.org/getDocument.cfm?documentID=1627
Story below:
-------------------------
Veterans With Cancer Might Fall Under Radar for
Depression
By Joan Hennessy, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Veterans with cancer sometimes do not undergo depression screening — a
first step in easing the turmoil of possibly their hardest-fought battle.
While staff at the Indianapolis VA Medical Center screened 95 percent of
veterans in primary care for depression, they screened cancer patients
less consistently, according to a study in the November-December issue of
the journal General Hospital Psychiatry.
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Results varied depending on the cancer type,
according to co-authors Laura E. Jones, Ph.D., an epidemiologist at the
medical center, and Caroline Carney Doebbeling, M.D., a psychiatrist and
internist at the Indiana University School of Medicine.
The researchers found that 1,083 out of 1,553 cancer patients underwent
screening for depression. Nevertheless, while 82 percent of veterans with
male-genital cancers underwent screening, only 51 percent of veterans with
respiratory cancers did.
“When doctors think [patients] have a higher risk of mortality, depression
screening is not as big a focus,” Jones said. Important steps are simply
“making clinicians aware of it and making sure they realize it could be
improved.”
The authors found that annual depression screening among veterans with
cancer has improved: 42 percent underwent screening at the facility in
2000 compared with 81 percent in 2003. On average, 10 percent to 25
percent of cancer patients experience depression, a rate four times higher
than the general population.
Jones and Doebbeling believe that treatment for depression will improve
quality of life, and write that untreated depression in cancer patients
could result in “disability, impaired quality of life, poor prognosis and
increased risk of mortality, although the evidence is controversial.”
To be sure, an underlying debate continues over whether treating the
psyche can help heal the body.
A study in the December issue of Cancer, a journal of the American Cancer
Society, found that a patient’s emotional status does not influence cancer
survival. The study reported that emotional well-being alone was not a
factor affecting the prognosis of head and neck cancers.
“There is the important question of whether screening actually improves
outcomes. In this case, does it reduce depression?” asked James Coyne,
author of the Cancer study.
Effective treatment of depression has a number of components, said Coyne,
director of the Behavioral Oncology Program at the University of
Pennsylvania Abramson Cancer Center.
“I think the risk is that because screening uses up resources, these
resources will be withdrawn from other activities, like effectively
following up on patients whom we already know are depressed. I do not
think that there is evidence that screening improves the outcome of
depression without making substantially more resources available,” Coyne
said.
He said that the Indianapolis VA study shows a high rate of screening and
that the more pressing challenge is “keeping treatment of depression as a
priority in the face of the competing demands of dealing with a
life-threatening illness: cancer.”
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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