Journal of pain and symptom management
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Jun 2005
Comparative StudyDiscrepancies and similarities in how patients with lung cancer and their professional and family caregivers assess symptom occurrence and symptom distress.
Historically, conceptual distinctions have not been made between the components of symptom experience--symptom distress and symptom occurrence--nor has the question of how distressing patients perceive different symptoms to be, irrespective of their current occurrence, been addressed. The aim of this study was to explore the hypothesis that there may be different patterns in discrepancies between how lung cancer patients and their caregivers assess symptom distress and in how they assess symptom occurrence. Thirty-three patient-nurse dyads and 54 patient-family caregiver dyads assessed patients' symptom distress and symptom occurrence. ⋯ Patients and caregivers were more in agreement about which symptoms might cause distress than about current symptom occurrence. Caregivers rated symptom occurrence as greater than patients. The findings highlight the need to further explore what symptom characteristics caregivers address when assessing patients' symptom experiences.