Depression and anxiety in cancer patients seeking psychosocial therapy
Abstract
The prevalence of mental disorders (particularly depression and anxiety) in a sample of Canadian
cancer patients who were referred to a psychosocial oncology program was investigated. Thirty-one
cancer patients filled out both the Beck Depression Inventory-11 (BDI-II) and the Beck
Anxiety Inventory (BAI) before seeing their psychosocial counselor who evaluated the patient
according to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders — 4th Ed. diagnostic criteria.
The prevalence of depression and anxiety disorders in cancer patients was found to be 13% and
6.45%, respectively. Total BDI-II and BAI scores remained constant over time and both
instruments were found to be reliable measures of symptom severity. A number of demographic
and cancer-related variables significantly correlated with BDI-II and BAI scores. Neither the BDIII
nor the BAI appeared to be particularly good at predicting DSM-FV diagnosis.
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- Retrospective theses [1604]