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Dive into the research topics where Andrea Feldstain is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea Feldstain.


Current Oncology | 2013

An interprofessional palliative care oncology rehabilitation program: effects on function and predictors of program completion

Martin R. Chasen; Andrea Feldstain; D. Gravelle; Neil MacDonald; José Pereira

BACKGROUND After treatment, patients with active cancer face a considerable burden from the effects of both the disease and its treatment. The Palliative Rehabilitation Program (prp) is designed to ameliorate disease effects and to improve the patients functioning. The present study evaluated predictors of program completion and changes in functioning, symptoms, and well-being after the program. METHODS The program received referrals for 173 patients who had finished anticancer therapy. Of those 173 patients, 116 with advanced cancer were eligible and enrolled in the 8-week interprofessional prp; 67 completed it. Measures of physical, nutritional, social, and psychological functioning were evaluated at entry to the program and at completion. RESULTS Participants experienced significant improvements in physical performance (p < 0.000), nutrition (p = 0.001), symptom severity (p = 0.005 to 0.001), symptom interference with functioning (p = 0.003 to 0.001), fatigue (p = 0.001), and physical endurance, mobility, and balance or function (p = 0.001 to 0.001). Reasons that participants did not complete the prp were disease progression, geographic inaccessibility, being too well (program not challenging enough), death, and personal or unknown reasons. A normal level of C-reactive protein (<10 mg/L, p = 0.029) was a predictor of program completion. CONCLUSIONS Patients living with advanced cancers who underwent the interprofessional prp experienced significant improvement in functioning across several domains. Program completion can be predicted by a normal level of C-reactive protein.


Current Oncology | 2013

The association between malnutrition and psychological distress in patients with advanced head-and-neck cancer.

L. Ma; P. Poulin; Andrea Feldstain; M.R. Chasen

OBJECTIVE Malnutrition and psychological distress are often seen in patients with head-and-neck cancer, but little is known about the interrelationships between those two symptoms. The present study examined the relationship between malnutrition and psychological distress in patients with advanced head-and-neck cancer. METHODS Using the Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment, 99 patients with advanced-stage head-and-neck cancer were screened for nutrition status. The patients were also screened for psychosocial distress (using the Distress Thermometer) and for psychosocial issues (using the Problem Checklist). Any relationship between malnutrition and psychosocial distress was determined by regression and correlation analysis. We also used t-tests to compare distress levels for patients with and without specific nutrition-related symptoms. RESULTS The study group included 80 men and 19 women [mean age: 58.4 ± 10.9 years (range: 23-85 years)]. The correlation between poorer nutrition status and level of psychological distress was significant r = 0.37 (p < 0.001). Specifically, reduced food intake and symptoms were both positively associated with distress: r = 0.27 and r = 0.29 respectively, both significant at p < 0.01. After controlling for the effects of psychosocial problems and pain, nutrition status remained a significant predictor of distress, explaining 3.8% of the variance in the distress scores of the patients (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS Malnutrition and symptoms were strongly related to distress in patients with advanced head-and-neck cancer. Our results suggest the need for further research into the complex relationship between nutrition status and distress and into the management of both nutrition and distress in cancer care.


Current Oncology | 2014

Screening for distress in patients with cancer: methodologic considerations

Andrea Feldstain; Christina Tomei; M. Bélanger; Sophie Lebel

Distress has been declared the 6th vital sign in Canadian cancer care. Accordingly, health care professionals in Canada are expected to screen for distress in patients with cancer, for which a toolkit has been developed. Identifying patients who may be in need of further resources has the potential to improve quality of care because those patients are more likely to have their existing distress identified and to be referred for appropriate follow-up services. The present article briefly reviews the background literature and the validation of the measures in the toolkit, and highlights future directions for methodologic validation of the toolkit for use according to the protocol.


Psychology & Health | 2013

Do behavioural self-blame and stigma predict positive health changes in survivors of lung or head and neck cancers?

Sophie Lebel; Andrea Feldstain; Megan McCallum; Sara Beattie; Jonathan C. Irish; A. Bezjak; Gerald M. Devins

Survivors of lung or head and neck cancers often change tobacco and alcohol consumption after diagnosis, but few studies have examined other positive health changes (PHCs) or their determinants in these groups. The present study aims to: (a) document PHCs in survivors of lung (n = 107) or head and neck cancers (n = 99) and (b) examine behavioural self-blame and stigma as determinants of PHCs. We hypothesised that: (a) survivors would make a variety of PHCs; (b) behavioural self-blame for the disease would positively predict making PHCs; and (c) stigma would negatively predict making PHCs. Methods: Respondents self-administered measures of PHC, behavioural self-blame, and stigma. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis tested the hypotheses. Results: More than 65% of respondents reported making PHCs, the most common being changes in diet (25%), exercise (23%) and tobacco consumption (16.5%). Behavioural self-blame significantly predicted PHCs but stigma did not. However, both behavioural self-blame and stigma significantly predicted changes in tobacco consumption. Conclusions: Many survivors of lung or head and neck cancers engage in PHCs, but those who do not attribute the disease to their behaviour are less likely to do so. Attention to this problem and additional counselling may help people to adopt PHCs.


Psycho-oncology | 2018

Exploring the screening capacity of the Fear of Cancer Recurrence Inventory‐Short Form for clinical levels of fear of cancer recurrence

Joanna E. Fardell; Georden Jones; Allan ‘Ben’ Smith; Sophie Lebel; Belinda Thewes; Daniel Costa; K. Tiller; Sébastien Simard; Andrea Feldstain; Sara Beattie; Megan McCallum; Phyllis Butow

Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is a common concern among cancer survivors. Identifying survivors with clinically significant FCR requires validated screening measures and clinical cut‐offs. We evaluated the Fear of Cancer Recurrence Inventory‐Short Form (FCRI‐SF) clinical cut‐off in 2 samples.


Archive | 2018

Rehabilitation and Survivorship

Ravi Bhargava; Martin Chasen; Andrea Feldstain

Cancer rehabilitation is a process that assists the individual with a cancer diagnosis to obtain optimal physical, social, psychological, and vocational functioning within the limits created by the disease and its treatment. The functional autonomy of patients with cancer is compromised. The severity ranges from negligible to profound at the extremes. Owing to the nature of the cancer trajectory, rehabilitative goals have been divided into preventive, restorative, supportive, and palliative.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 2013

Does fear of cancer recurrence predict cancer survivors' health care use?

Sophie Lebel; Christina Tomei; Andrea Feldstain; Sara Beattie; Megan McCallum


Quality of Life Research | 2016

Empirical validation of the English version of the Fear of Cancer Recurrence Inventory

Sophie Lebel; Sébastien Simard; Cheryl Harris; Andrea Feldstain; Sara Beattie; Megan McCallum; Monique Lefebvre; Josée Savard; Gerald M. Devins


Supportive Care in Cancer | 2016

An interdisciplinary palliative rehabilitation intervention bolstering general self-efficacy to attenuate symptoms of depression in patients living with advanced cancer

Andrea Feldstain; Sophie Lebel; Martin R. Chasen


Supportive Care in Cancer | 2017

Reported distress in patients living with advanced cancer: changes pre-post interdisciplinary palliative rehabilitation

Andrea Feldstain; Neil MacDonald; Ravi Bhargava; Martin Chasen

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