A substantive theory of quality of life of adults with chronic leukaemia
References (26)
- et al.
Hairy Cell Leukemia, current management
Hematol./Oncol. Clin. N. Am.
(1990) - et al.
Management of chronic lymphocytic leukemia
Hematol./Oncol. Clin. N. Am.
(1990) Content validity of the Quality of Life index
Appl. Nurs. Res.
(1990)Chronic Myeloid Leukemia. A perspective of the clinical and biologic issues of the chronic phase
Hematol./Oncol. Clin. N. Am.
(1990)Having, Loving, Being. About Welfare in the Nordic Countries
(1980)- et al.
- et al.
Quality of life of adults with acute leukaemia
J. Adv. Nurs.
(1993) - et al.
Quality of life: some theoretical issues
J. clin. Pharmacol.
(1981) - et al.
Treatment with alpha-interferon has good effects on Hairy-Cell Leukaemia
Läkartidningen
Cited by (35)
Time for a new era in the evaluation of targeted therapies for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia: Inclusion of quality of life and other patient-reported outcomes
2012, Critical Reviews in Oncology/HematologyCitation Excerpt :For descriptive purposes, studies were classified according to the main type of treatment administered to patients: 6 dealt with IFN based therapies [33–38], 7 with BMT [39–45] and only 2 analyzed PROs in the context of targeted therapies [46,47]. Ten studies enrolled overall less than 100 patients and of these 8 included less than 50 patients [33–35,38–41,44] thus limiting the power of analysis and the possibility of making robust conclusions based on PROs. While 13 papers dealt with HRQOL, two studies investigated specifically neurobehavioral outcomes and depressive side effects of treatments [33,38].
Research priorities in haemato-oncology nursing: Results of a literature review and a Delphi study
2009, European Journal of Oncology NursingCitation Excerpt :Conditions affecting a mainly older age group, or when treatment intent is to control rather than cure the disease are, however, not well represented within QoL studies. None of the studies included individuals with aplastic anaemia and only two included people with chronic leukaemias (other than CML) (Bertero et al., 1997a,b). Only small numbers of individuals with myeloma were included in any study and the one study that focused specifically on myeloma explored the effect of pain and mood disturbance on QoL rather than overall QoL.
Coping with illness and subjective theories of illness in adult patients with haematological malignancies: Systematic review
2009, Critical Reviews in Oncology/HematologyCitation Excerpt :As predisposing aspects of STOI, perception (e.g., illness perception, meaning of illness), and the patients’ cognition (health locus of control, speculation regarding treatment or prognosis) in respect of their own illness, was evaluated. Ten of eleven studies analysed patients’ expectations concerning their ability to influence treatment outcome [37,38,71–74,76–79]. In the 10 studies with a qualitative methodology, there are no results with clinical (somatic, psychopathologic) parameters; only Frick et al. [79] used Karnofsky’s index as a somatic variable.
Assessing the quality of life of patients in phase I and II anti-cancer drug trials: Interviews versus questionnaires
2003, Social Science and MedicineLiving with a blood cancer in later life: The complex challenges and related support needs of adults aged 75 and older
2023, Palliative and Supportive Care