1 / 20

QUALITY AND ADOPTION TO FAMILY LIFE IN CERVICAL CANCER SURVIVORS AFTER RADIOTHERAPY

QUALITY AND ADOPTION TO FAMILY LIFE IN CERVICAL CANCER SURVIVORS AFTER RADIOTHERAPY. Dr.Rishan.T.S, Cancer Institute(WIA), Adyar,Chennai. INTRODUCTION. Most common cancer among women in rural population 2 nd most common among women in urban population

howard
Download Presentation

QUALITY AND ADOPTION TO FAMILY LIFE IN CERVICAL CANCER SURVIVORS AFTER RADIOTHERAPY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. QUALITY AND ADOPTION TO FAMILY LIFE IN CERVICAL CANCER SURVIVORS AFTER RADIOTHERAPY Dr.Rishan.T.S, Cancer Institute(WIA), Adyar,Chennai

  2. INTRODUCTION Most common cancer among women in rural population 2nd most common among women in urban population MMTR recorded 21.2% incidence in 2005 and 17.2% at present Still under reported in India

  3. MATERIALS AND METHODS 101 Disease free survival patients selected for the study Age group 27 to 47 years Minimum survival period of 3 years

  4. TOOLS Cancer Institute-Quality of life Questionnaire EORTC Cervical cancer module ( QLQ CX 24) Distress Thermometer

  5. CI-QOL Comprises 41 questions 39 questions in Likert four point scale Last two questions in semantic scale ranging from 1-10 More than one item in questionnaire assess various components

  6. SCORES

  7. EORTC QLQ CX 24 Module meant for patients varying in disease stage and treatment modality Comprises 24 Questions Based on functional and symptomatic scale.

  8. Distress Thermometer Scores 0-4 no distress Scores 5-7 some level of distress Scores 8-10 High level of distress

  9. ADMINISTRATION Informed consent obtained prior to the study 45 to 60 minutes for questionnaire.

  10. RESULTS Radiation alone N=55 Concurrent Chemoradiation N=56 Stage 1 and 2 N=75 Stage 3 N=26 3 years of survival

  11. BODY IMAGE

  12. SEXUAL FUNCTIONING

  13. ANALYSIS

  14. 66.9% reported poor quality of life. 79.6% reported better body image Sexual dysfunction due to social stigma and not due to treatment factors. Compared to western population, discomfort not due to treatment modalities, but various social factors.

  15. CONCLUSION Compared to western population, our patients experienced a better QOL Type of treatment and disease stage didnot affect QOL Ignorance about cancers, reluctance among females, and age factors contributed to poor QOL.

  16. THANK YOU

More Related