Fleishman Stewart B, Homel Peter, Chen Maurice R, Rosenwald Victoria, Abolencia Victoria, Gerber Juliet, Nadesan Sanjay
Continuum Cancer Centers of New York, Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, USA.
Continuum Cancer Centers of New York, Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, USA; and Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York, USA.
J Community Support Oncol. 2015 Jan;13(1):22-6. doi: 10.12788/jcso.0102.
Animal-assisted visits (AAVs) are commonplace in cancer centers, but there is little evidence of their usefulness.
To test the efficacy of AAVs in improving the quality of life in patients with head and neck cancer receiving combined chemotherapy-radiation therapy.
42 patients consented to daily AAVs during the time they received therapy for head and neck cancer. The Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General Scale (FACT-G) was administered at baseline, week 3, and week 7 (at the end of therapy), and the Satisfaction With The AAV Intervention instrument, an 18-item scale adapted from the Pet Attitude Scale.
37 patients completed at least baseline and 1 follow-up assessment for a single group analysis of change over time. Means for Fact-G subscales showed significant declines in Physical Well-Being (PWB, P < .001) and Functional Well-Being (FWB, P = .003). In contrast, Social Well-Being increased (SWB, P = .03). Controlling for declines in PWB at each time point, increases in Emotional Well-Being (EWB) were also significant (P = .004).
Scheduling and patient preference prevented conducting a randomized trial.
FACT-G analysis showed significant increase in SWB and EWB despite high symptom burden and clinically evident and expected declines in PWB and FWB. Mean scores for satisfaction related to psychological symptoms, liking animals/pets, and contact with animals were consistently higher than neutral score or Unsure (all, P < .001). Satisfaction related to physical symptoms was not significantly different from neutral. Though self-selected for an affinity to pets, patients endorsed a high level of satisfaction, which supports the usefulness of this intervention.
动物辅助探访(AAV)在癌症中心很常见,但几乎没有证据表明其有用性。
测试动物辅助探访对接受放化疗联合治疗的头颈癌患者生活质量的改善效果。
42名患者在接受头颈癌治疗期间同意每天接受动物辅助探访。在基线期、第3周和第7周(治疗结束时)使用癌症治疗功能评估通用量表(FACT-G),并使用从宠物态度量表改编而来的18项动物辅助探访干预满意度量表。
37名患者完成了至少基线期和1次随访评估,用于对随时间变化进行单组分析。FACT-G分量表的均值显示,生理幸福感(PWB,P <.001)和功能幸福感(FWB,P =.003)显著下降。相比之下,社会幸福感有所增加(SWB,P =.03)。在控制每个时间点PWB下降的情况下,情感幸福感(EWB)的增加也很显著(P =.004)。
日程安排和患者偏好妨碍了进行随机试验。
FACT-G分析显示,尽管症状负担较重,且生理幸福感和功能幸福感在临床上明显且预期会下降,但社会幸福感和情感幸福感显著增加。与心理症状、喜欢动物/宠物以及与动物接触相关的满意度平均得分始终高于中性得分或“不确定”(均P <.001)。与身体症状相关的满意度与中性得分无显著差异。尽管患者是因对宠物有亲和力而自行选择参与,但他们表示满意度很高,这支持了这种干预措施的有用性。