Authors
Rosangela Caruso, Mara Giulia Nanni, Michelle B Riba, Silvana Sabato, Luigi Grassi
Publication date
2017/9/3
Source
International Review of Psychiatry
Volume
29
Issue
5
Pages
389-402
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
With cancer incidence increasing over time, attention to the burden of related psychiatric and psychosocial consequences of the disease and treatment is a major topic for both cancer patients and their caregivers. Among cancer patients, psychiatric (e.g. adjustment, anxiety, depressive disorders) and neuropsychiatric disorders (e.g. cognitive disorders secondary to treatment, delirium) have been shown to affect an average of 30–35% patients, with differences according to stage and type of cancer. Also other psychosocial syndromes (e.g. demoralization, health anxiety, irritable mood) not taken into account in usual nosological systems should be considered for their impact on the patient’s quality-of-life. Also, it has been repeatedly reported that psychological distress reverberates substantially throughout the nuclear family, and that a family approach is necessary in cancer care, with the caregiver–patient dyad as a …
Total citations
2017201820192020202120222023202466162131565329
Scholar articles
R Caruso, MG Nanni, MB Riba, S Sabato, L Grassi - International Review of Psychiatry, 2017