Symptom Levels in Care-Seeking Bangladeshi and Nepalese Adults With Advanced Cancer

Author:

Love Richard Reed1,Ferdousy Tahmina1,Paudel Bishnu D.1,Nahar Shamsun1,Dowla Rumana1,Adibuzzaman Mohammad1,Ahsan Golam Mushih Tanimul1,Uddin Miftah1,Salim Reza1,Ahamed Sheikh Iqbal1

Affiliation:

1. Richard Reed Love, Tahmina Ferdousy, and Reza Salim, Amader Gram Cancer Care and Research Center, Khulna and Rampal; Shamsun Nahar, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University; Rumana Dowla, Bangladesh Palliative and Supportive Care Foundation, Dhaka, Bangladesh; Bishnu D. Paudel, National Academy of Medical Sciences, Kathmandu, Nepal; and Mohammad Adibuzzaman, Golam Mushih Tanimul Ahsan, Miftah Uddin, and Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed, Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI.

Abstract

Purpose Three-fourths of patients with advanced cancer are reported to suffer from pain. A primary barrier to provision of adequate symptom treatment is failure to appreciate the intensity of the symptoms patients are experiencing. Because data on Bangladeshi and Nepalese patients’ perceptions of their symptomatic status are limited, we sought such information using a cell phone questionnaire. Methods At tertiary care centers in Dhaka and Kathmandu, we recruited 640 and 383 adult patients, respectively, with incurable malignancy presenting for outpatient visits and instructed them for that single visit on one-time completion of a cell phone platform 15-item survey of questions about common cancer-associated symptoms and their magnitudes using Likert scales of 0 to 10. The questions were taken from the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System and the Brief Pain Inventory instruments. Results All but two Bangladeshi patients recruited agreed to study participation. Two-thirds of Bangladeshi patients reported usual pain levels ≥ 5, and 50% of Nepalese patients reported usual pain levels ≥ 4 (population differences significant at P < .001). Conclusion Bangladeshi and Nepalese adults with advanced cancer are comfortable with cell phone questionnaires about their symptoms and report high levels of pain. Greater attention to the suffering of these patients is warranted.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Oncology,Cancer Research

Reference5 articles.

1. Pain in far-advanced cancer

2. Grossman SA, Nesbit S: Cancer pain, in Abellof MD, Armitage JO, Niederhuber JE, et al (eds): Clinical Oncology (ed 3). Philadelphia, PA, Elsevier, 2004, pp 715-730

3. Regular use of a verbal pain scale improves the understanding of oncology inpatient pain intensity.

4. The Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS): A Simple Method for the Assessment of Palliative Care Patients

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