Rhona Scott’s research while affiliated with University Hospital Crosshouse and other places

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Publications (3)


Helping the clinician help me: towards listening in cancer care
  • Article

May 2012

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20 Reads

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1 Citation

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Craig A White

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Zara Christie

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[...]

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Rhona Scott

Helping the clinician help me: Towards listening in cancer care

May 2012

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23 Reads

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3 Citations

Despite global support for the ideal of shared decision making, its enactment remains difficult in practice. The UK charity, Macmillan Cancer Support, attempted to incorporate the principles of shared decision making within a programme of distress management in Scotland. Distress management begins by completing the Distress Thermometer (DT). Although the DT is a screening tool, its function in this programme was extended to facilitate collaborative communication within a consultation. The aim of this grounded theory was to analyse the patient experience of the process. Nineteen people underwent semi-structured interviews focused on their experience of distress management. Participants were a mixed-cancer cohort aged 40-79 years. Findings were discussed in a structured manner with a further 14 service users and carers, and 19 clinical specialists in cancer. Constant comparison of all data revealed that the process of positive distress management could best be explained by reference to the core category: 'helping the clinician help me'. The emergence of this core category is detailed by situating its development within the iterative nature of the grounded theory method.


Table 2 . Summary of study characteristics, conclusions and recommendations 
Table 2 . Summary of study characteristics, conclusions and recommendations (Continued) 
The clinical utility of the Distress Thermometer: a review
  • Literature Review
  • Full-text available

February 2011

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2,450 Reads

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92 Citations

The Distress Thermometer (DT) is a well validated screening tool, demonstrably sensitive and reasonably specific to the construct of distress in cancer. Its brevity makes it ideal to incorporate into a system of distress management. To ascertain how far this idea has been developed in practice, and to support future research, a literature review was undertaken. Medline, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Embase, ASSIA, British Nursing Index, AMED, CCTR, and HMIC were systematically searched. Forty studies were reviewed that examined the function of the DT alone, together with the problem list (PL), and/or other validated measures. The majority of studies validated the DT against other robust measures of distress in order to establish 'caseness' in these populations, and establish factors associated with distress. Many of the studies recommended that further research should test their findings in clinical practice. A small section of the literature focused on the clinical utility of the DT as a facilitator of consultations, and found it to have potential in this regard. It is concluded that there is enough validation research, and in line with the majority of these studies' recommendations, future research should focus on the utility of DT as part of a structured distress management programme.

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Citations (2)


... 19 Time taken in consultation 'Time taken per consultation' had not been part of the original protocol, and previous attempts to time consultations had been quite complex. 20 The focus of this study was on consultation dynamics that required audio recording, and the research assistant also had to ensure consent and preclinic paperwork had been completed as well as postconsultation metrics too. Because we had hoped other teams would participate in the study we wanted to keep the protocol as simple as possible to minimise dropout due to complexity 21 it was decided that timing of the consultations might be a measure too far, and so it was excluded from the original protocol. ...

Reference:

Holistic needs assessment in outpatient cancer care: a randomised controlled trial
Helping the clinician help me: Towards listening in cancer care
  • Citing Article
  • May 2012

... Perceived short-term stress was measured using the Distress Thermometer (DT) [37], a single-item screening tool known for its high sensitivity and specificity in capturing short-term stress [38]. This instrument has previously been validated for use in the Italian context [33,35]. ...

The clinical utility of the Distress Thermometer: a review