Integrating mental health services into oncology treatment protocols

Feb. 22, 2023

A new study by CUNY SPH doctoral student Thinh Vu and colleagues reveals that cancer inpatients experience high levels of symptoms related to depression and anxiety, as well as significant impairment in mobility and daily activities.

Study participant is interviewed in the Radiotherapy Department

In the study, Vu, along with Professor Victoria Ngo, Postdoctoral Fellow Marina Weiss and others highlight the importance of integrating mental health services into existing oncology treatment protocols.

Participants reported the greatest impairment in mobility and daily activities, especially among those with gastrointestinal cancers, undergoing radiation therapy alone, reporting higher levels of depression and anxiety, and lower levels of self-reported health status.

Patients with higher depression and anxiety symptoms and functional impairment also reported greater barriers to mental health services, underscoring the need to address barriers to the provision of mental health care for cancer patients.

Study participant is interviewed

Attitudinal-related barriers, such as wanting to solve mental health concerns alone and believing they would resolve on their own, were particularly prevalent.

“To address these attitudes and improve access to mental health services, it is essential to increase mental health literacy and decrease the stigma surrounding mental illness,” says Vu. “Our findings suggest that employing highly trained and sensitive staff to assess and educate patients may be acceptable to the majority of patients.”

Thinh Vu is a 2022 Cancer Epidemiology Education in Special Populations (CEESP) Fellow and this study was funded by the program.

Vu TT, Lu W, Weiss M, Thi-Hoai Nguyen L, Ngo VK. Mental Health, Functional Impairment, and Barriers to Mental Health Access Among Cancer Patients in Vietnam. Psycho-oncology. 2023 Feb 16. doi: 10.1002/pon.6114. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 36797820.

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