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Needs Assessment for cancer patients and their families

Abstract

Background

The assessment of needs for cancer care is a critical step in providing high quality care and achieving cancer patients' and families' satisfaction. Instruments can be used to assess needs and guide cancer care planning. This study discusses the importance of the needs assessment, relationships between needs, satisfaction and quality of life; and reviews the assessment instruments of needs experienced by cancer patients and their families.

Methods

A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE and CANCERLIT data bases. Instruments were evaluated based on their conceptual and measurement models as well as their demonstrated reliability and validity. The authors also sought information pertaining to instruments' burden of administration and responsiveness. Measures compromised by a lack of published psychometric description were not included.

Results

This search identified 17 patient needs assessment instruments and seven family needs assessment instruments. The development and psychometric proprieties of most of these instruments were well documented. However, data on their responsiveness and burden of administration were scarce.

Conclusions

Each selected instrument meets some but not all of our criteria for validity, reliability, responsiveness and burden. It is questionable whether any instrument can be developed meeting all the requirements. However, there is still a need to continue researching and developing needs assessment instruments leading to effective intervention and improving quality of cancer care.

Review

Introduction

Health care, including cancer care, is in the midst of a revolution driven by strong forces of cost containment and competition.[1] While economic pressures may be new to health care in general and cancer care in particular, they are common in highly competitive industries where price reductions regularly occur simultaneously with performance improvements. Cancer care providers will be expected to both improve performance and reduce costs; not as a one-time event but as a way of life. However, these improvements are unlikely to occur without a much better understanding of patient and family needs and the factors that influence them. Once those needs are fully understood, interventions can be designed that will improve adherence and reduce waste and rework.

These pressures to contain costs occur at the same time that consumers are taking a more active role in their care.[2] Such trends are manifested in the growth of not only alternative and complimentary care, but also in the growth of e-health. Cancer patients and their families are searching for alternatives, in part because the health field does not fully understand and respond to their needs. The experience of patients with advanced cancer, and of their families, illustrate the implications of not designing delivery systems around a clear understanding of patient and family needs.

In Approaching Death, the Institute of Medicine[3] identified key patient needs such as fears of abandonment and protracted death, and need for reliable, respectful care and advance care planning that promotes "norms of decency." Yet too many people suffer unnecessary pain and distress and there are major impediments to good end of life care.[4, 5] In fact, a large study[6] of seriously ill hospitalized patients documented substantial shortcomings in communication, treatment, and characteristics of death. The Institute of Medicine report also identified the lack of scientific knowledge and data on patient and family needs, especially the paucity of longitudinal data [3]. Inadequate understanding of needs among diverse populations has also been identified as a major problem[3].

Needs assessments are required to guide care planning, in part because many caregivers and patients do not communicate concerns to their clinicians.[7–11] When they do share needs, they often omit important psychosocial concerns.[12, 13] Several factors contribute to this breakdown. Many patients and caregivers believe that pain, grief, anger, and suffering are inevitable with cancer. Others believe that clinicians do not want to address such issues, as evidenced by the absence of clinician inquiry or concern required to develop a meaningful dialog [14–19]. As a result of inadequate understanding of patient and family needs, both healthcare costs and unnecessary suffering increase.[20–22] Substantial evidence points especially to the damaging effects of inadequately meeting information and support needs [19, 23–25]. For instance, if clinicians are unaware that a caregiver feels unprepared to clean and drug a patient's wound, then adequate training may not be provided; infections may then develop that increase suffering and costs. The research conducted so far also fails to describe how patient and caregiver information and support needs change with key events such as learning that treatment is no longer working [26–29].

Many obstacles exist to assessing patient or caregiver needs including: lack of clarity on best practices in initially identifying needs; determining possible levels of performance on each need; measuring the importance of needs and employing needs assessment data in design; and improvement and evaluation efforts. We will first examine how needs assessment relates to satisfaction and quality of life, and point out the complex relationships among needs themselves. Next we will review existing cancer needs assessments and comment on their strengths and weaknesses. Then we will make recommendations for future research in this field. Because we believe cancer is a family disease with ramifications far beyond the patient, we propose that needs assessment should focus on both patients and family caregivers. We will examine needs assessment instruments that address both patients and families.

Relationships among and between needs, satisfaction and quality of life

In developing needs assessments, it is important to understand how needs relate to each other, as well as how those interrelationships affect satisfaction and quality of life. This section will examine those relationships and how they are influenced by various applications such as programs to improve cancer care.

Some needs are more proximally related to quality of life (or satisfaction) than others. Figure 1 portrays one such relationship. Here, a patient's need to understand prognosis may raise anxiety (a key aspect of emotional health status), thus having a direct effect on quality of life. Another need, that of avoiding the guilt of bothering a busy MD, may have a small but direct effect on quality of life, because the guilt may raise anxiety. However, that need to avoid guilt may have a much stronger influence on the ability to meet a more proximal need (the ability to obtain a clear understanding of prognosis). The end result is that not bothering the MD (in order to avoid guilt), despite the need to understand one's prognosis, may further raise patient anxiety and substantially impact quality of life.

Figure 1
figure 1

Possible proximal relationship between needs and quality of life

The relationship between two needs (e.g. avoiding guilt and understanding prognosis) may be different when it comes to satisfaction. Both of the needs shown in Figure 1 (if not met) work to reduce quality of life, but one may offset the other when it comes to satisfaction. Figure 2 provides an example where lack of a clear understanding of prognosis could reduce satisfaction with care. But the guilt associated with bothering a busy MD may counteract that dissatisfaction with care, if patients put the blame on themselves (rather than on the MD) for being poorly informed. Furthermore, the direct effect of guilt on satisfaction may be stronger than the indirect effect, whereas the indirect effect may be stronger in relationship to quality of life.

Figure 2
figure 2

Possible relationship between needs and satisfaction

Putting these relationships together (as shown in Figure 3) leads to a more complex model than the one initially proposed, but one that offers much more insight into how to best intervene to improve quality of life. Depending on the proximity and the strength of these relationships, one might conclude that obtaining an honest and understandable prognosis is more important to improving quality of life than bothering an physician. If a means other than interaction with physician were available (possibly through selective use of information technology), one would not need to worry about training patients in the appropriateness and methods of assertiveness in order to feel less guilt.

Figure 3
figure 3

Possible relationship between needs, satisfaction and quality of life

Another example is the relationship between the need to talk to patients who have already completed treatment, the need to avoid medication errors such as infections, and the relationship between those needs and the quality of life dimension of functional well-being. Talking to peers may elicit information on how to avoid medication errors, as well as provide a small calming effect. However, knowing how to avoid errors may increase anxiety.

When it comes to satisfaction with care, a different relationship might exist. We know that informed patients tend to have high expectations and thus may be less satisfied with care. Hence talking to peers and knowing how to avoid medical error may both have a negative effect on satisfaction as Figure 5 would suggest.

Figure 4
figure 4

Possible relationship between needs and quality of life

Figure 5
figure 5

Relationship with satisfaction

And putting these two relationships together leads to a much better understanding of quality of life. If a way to help patients avoid medical errors will be provided, the discussion with patients might even further lessen anxiety.

This suggests that measuring the importance of needs may require: (1) measuring both the direct importance to quality of life (or satisfaction), as well as (2) the importance of one need in meeting another need. And one cannot estimate the importance of these second order effects without understanding the relationships exemplified in Figure 3, a task the authors have never seen carried out in a needs assessment.

Thus the relationships between needs, as well as among needs and satisfaction and quality of life, should be better understood if we hope to improve care and quality of life. This understanding is important for designing and conducting needs assessments. If a needs assessment prioritizes which needs should be addressed, and if that assessment is done without recognizing relationships among needs, the results can be used in potentially damaging ways. For example, a program that might be established to connect patients could increase a patient's perceived need to prevent medical errors, and thus increase anxiety, unless an initiative to prevent medical errors is also put in place. Hence, these unintended consequences should be considered. Simple mechanisms can be developed to ensure that these relationships are identified. For instance, one might place the needs on 3 × 5 cards, and sort the cards so that cards are placed together if meeting one need will have a great effect (positive or negative) on meeting another. If such a relationship is formed, one might flag analysis such that if one need is addressed, the effect on another need should be considered.

Methods

A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE (1966–Aug2002) and CANCERLIT(1975–Aug2002) to identify needs assessment instruments used to guide cancer care program design and intervention research. The search terms used, either singly or in combination, were 'cancer', 'patient need', 'caregiver need', 'audit measures', 'instrument', 'questionnaires', 'survey', 'assessment' and 'outcome' that appear in the title/abstract. The articles from these searches were further selected using the following inclusion criteria: empirical studies; studies with cancer in adult patients; studies about patients/caregivers experienced needs/problems for care.

The search produced 170 articles. Manual searches of the bibliographies of searched articles and reviews in the field were also conducted. Each instrument's developer was also contacted to verify the psychometric evaluation information we found in the literature. Excluded from our analyses were instruments that : 1) did not document how they were developed or tested,[30, 31] 2) did not measure importance or satisfaction[32] and 3) did measure satisfaction with specific health providers[33, 34]. We included both instruments that studied satisfaction of a broad set of needs derived from a health status perspective, and instruments that studied one class of needs only, e.g., needs for information or for one type of cancer. Figure 7 illustrates our selection process.

A total of 24 instruments were selected with 43 articles which present the relevant information for evaluation. The final instruments included in the study were the Cancer Rehabilitation Evaluation System (CARES);[35–38] the Cancer Rehabilitation Evaluation System-Short form (CARES-SF)[39]; the Cancer Patient Need Survey (CPNS)[40, 41]; the Cancer Patient Need Questionnaire (CPNQ)[42, 43]; the Supportive Care Need Survey (SCNS)[44]; the Home Care Study-Patient Form (HCS-PF)[45]; the Needs Evaluation Questionnaire (NEQ)[46]; the Patient Needs Assessment Tool (PNAT)[47]; the Derdiarian Informational Needs Assessment (DINA)[48]; the Patient Informational Needs Questionnaire (PINQ)[49]; the Prostate Cancer Needs Assessment (PCNA)[50]; the Psychosocial Needs Inventory (PNI)[51]; the Toronto Informational Needs Questionnaire-Breast Cancer (TINQ-BC)[52, 53]; the Information Needs Measure (INM)[54]; the Support Team Assessment Schedule (STAS)[55–58]; Palliative Care Assessment (PACA)[59]; the Needs Near The End-of-Life Care Screening Tool (NEST)[60, 61]; the Family Inventory of Need (FIN)[62]; the Family Inventory of Need-Husband (FIN-H)[63, 64]; the FAMCARE scale[65]; the Home Caregiver Need Survey (HCNS)[40, 66–68]; the Home Care Study-Caretaker Form (HCS-SF)[45]; the Need Satisfaction Scale (NSS) [69]and the Information and Support Needs Questionnaire (ISNQ)[70, 71].

Psychometric evaluation criteria

We described each instrument in terms of the following criteria.

Purpose and administration

We identified the instrument's original intended use(s) and application and the administration method, either self-reported or professionally-interviewed.

Items and domains

Numbers of items and domain structure of the instrument were reported.

Question format

The instrument's response format was reported.

Conceptual and measurement model

A search was conducted for the theoretical framework for the concepts the instrument is intended to measure and the relationship between those concepts. Information on conceptual and empirical support of scale structure, distinctiveness of multiple scales, and variability of the scale were obtained.

Validity

Content validity

Content validity was evaluated by investigating methods used to develop the instrument content and the empirical validation of the instrument in order to establish the appropriateness of instrument's intended use.

Construct calidity

Construct validity was studied to support the proposed interpretation of scores on the instrument based on theoretical implications associated with the constructs.

Reliability

Internal consistency

Internal consistency was examined to understand whether the items correlate with each other within the instrument. The estimates should be reported on both the total score and subscale scores when it is appropriate.

Reproducibility
Test-retest reproducibility

Test-retest reproducibility of the self-administered instrument was studied to assess whether the instrument produces stable scores over time. The time interval between administrations and the rationale that changes should be minimal were also searched.

Inter-rater reproducibility

For professionally-reported instruments, inter-rater reproducibility was searched to assess whether the instrument produces similar results across different interviewers.

Responsiveness

The instrument's ability to detect change was assessed. Longitudinal data was particularly searched.

Burden

Respondent burden

We looked for average time required to complete the instrument and assumed reading level. We also paid attention on the degree of missing data; the refusal rates and the refusal reasons.

Administrative burden

For professionally-administered instruments, we searched for the average time required and level of training needed for an interviewer to administer the instrument.

Results

Table 1 [see Additional file: 1] summaries the evaluation of these selected instruments.

Conceptual and measurement model

Seven instruments were developed with conceptual models. The dimensions of five instruments were examined by factor analysis. However, the instruments, which have both conceptual model definition and measurement evaluation, are the FIN and the NEST. The measurement invariance of the NEST was indicated by the multi-sample confirmatory factor analysis across socio-demographic strata. Furthermore, the uni-dimensionality of the NEST-SF was evaluated by the partial credit model, an approach in the Item Response Theory (IRT). It was the only instrument in our review using this relatively new measurement technique.

Validity

A wide variety of approaches were taken to examine instrument validity. The following paragraphs describe the various methods.

Content validity

In most case, panels of professionals were used to derive or review items. Literature review was most commonly used to generate instrument content (14 instruments). Eleven instruments used qualitative analysis of statements by patients/caregivers to generate items. The PCNA is an example of using such procedures. Other instruments selecting items from existing instruments were also observed (three instruments). Pre-testing of the items was conducted for eight instruments.

Construct validity

In our review, construct validity was mostly assessed by the relationship between the instrument under development and a measure of another concept to which it is supposedly theoretically related (12 out of 24). In general, good construct validity was shown. Another four instruments were examined for their discriminant validity, and one with poor discriminant validity was found.

Reliability

Internal consistency

The internal consistency of 20 out of 24 instruments in our review was assessed by the Cronbach alpha. The criterion level for coefficient alpha with a new scale has been suggested to be at about .70 or above[72]. Sixteen instruments had shown good internal consistency ranging from 0.7 to 0.95, except for some of the subscales.

Reproducibility

Test-Retest reproducibility

Nine of 24 instruments examined stability over time using an appropriate time interval between tests. The test-retest agreement of CARE, CARE-SF and DINA achieved above 80%. Good intercorrelation was indicated for CPNQ, NEQ, PCNA, PCNA, FAMCARE and FIN-H.

Inter-rater reproducibility

We examined only three professionally-administered instruments: the PNAT, STAS and PACA. Each of these three instruments demonstrated internal agreement between different raters. The domain inter-rater reliability of the PNAT ranges from 0.73–0.87 by Friedman test. The inter-rater agreement of the STAT also achieved .9 for each domain except predictability. The 0.4 and above Kappa estimates for the PACA domains also indicated a good inter-rater reproducibility.

Responsiveness

Instrument responsiveness was not commonly evaluated in our review. CARES-SF detected patients' change over time. The responsiveness of the DINA was examined by comparing a control group and experimental group. Both STAS and PACA were able to detect the intervention effects. The PINQ and the HCNS were able to detect expected changes in needs of patients and caregivers over time.

Burden

Respondent burden

The average completion time needed was reported for 16 instruments in our review, ranging from a few minutes to 43 minutes. The reading level was examined only for the CPNQ, the SCNS and the PCNA. Non-completion rate of those reported ranged from 11%–35%. Several investigators further explored the reasons and the pattern of non-completion. For example, the investigators of the PINQ found that some of the refusal reasons are "not wanting to be reminded of their illness, feel too old", etc. The investigators of the PNI revealed that men were less likely to participate in the research.

Administrative burden

Out of the three professionally-administered instruments included in our review, the PNAT is the only instrument which had demonstrated its low training requirement for professionals to complete in an experimental design study.

Discussion

In our review for cancer needs assessment instruments, 17 questionnaires were found for patients' needs and seven questionnaires were found for their families. Most instruments employ a self-reported format. Self-administered questionnaires are relatively inexpensive and require much less time than interviews.[73] Advocates for interviews or semi-structured interviews by professionals argued that such approaches might be employed in a clinical setting and reduce missing data. Future research might help us understand the circumstances under which specific administration formats should be used.

There is great variation in domains and numbers of item across instruments. Domains developed by different researchers often have very different organizing structures. Most of the instruments have their items distributed over several domains and similar domain names were found across instruments. Table 2 [see Additional file: 1] lists different domain names found in the review, with corresponding numbers of items in the instruments. However, domains with similar names sometimes contain items that are conceptually and operationally quite different. This may be due to different viewpoints from which the instruments were developed. However, the field would benefit if a common set of domain terms could be adopted to form the core of the needs assessments, and if items could be placed uniformly within domains.

The Likert-type scale is widely applied in our review to measure importance and satisfaction of needs. Some instruments have additional questions to check the presence of, or desire for, help with the need. However, instruments using Likert-type scales may produce "ceiling-effects," in which the majority of needs are rated as very or somewhat important. This low variability among highly-rated needs results in low separation of the needs, and provides no guidance on where scarce resources should be concentrated. The developers of the INM applied the Thurstone scale to overcome this "ceiling-effect." However, this type of scale's greatest disadvantage is that the participant either agrees or disagrees with a given item, and is not able to indicate more subtle responses that lie between two extremes.[74] New measurement strategies, not just scaling methods, need to be investigated, to have a structure for presenting questions to respondents and a corresponding method of analyzing the data in needs assessment context. This will allow scarce resources to be focused.

Conceptual and measurement models of the instruments were not often defined in our review. While many instruments spoke of semi-structured interviews as a way to identify items, this very general term actually provides little information about what was found and how. Ideally, conceptual theory and empirical study should support the measurement structure. We are pleased to see that the factor structure of the PINQ was examined separately for two disease groups and tested again in another longitudinal study. This was a good demonstration of a measurement model evaluation providing statistical evidence of factorial validity across groups. Item Response Theory (IRT) was used to assess the unidimensionality of the NEST-SF. There is a growing body of literature to advocate the potential advantages of using IRT in health outcome assessment. Future research examining the IRT application in needs assessment context is indicated.

Building assessment upon a strong conceptual theory is important; however, we have not seen a conceptual theory that adequately addressed the relationship among needs as specified in the first part of this paper. Such research is needed to understand the relationships among and between needs, satisfaction and quality of life.

One of our primary concerns, however, is lack of evidence that the instruments are sensitive to change. Only six instruments in our review had been tested over time for their responsiveness to change. For example, the DINA was evaluated by comparing an experimental group that was expected to change, with a control group that was expected to remain stable. However, effect size estimation, a useful expression of the change scores, was not reported in these studies. To understand how needs change over time as well as how effective the care intervention is, it is critical to more fully address responsiveness of the instruments.

The reading level of the instruments was not commonly examined, nor were the reasons for missing data and non-completion rates. Such information could yield important insights about the acceptability of the instruments. For instance, five of the respondents who withdrew from participation in the FIN-H study reported that they didn't feel comfortable talking about their feelings. Developers need to anticipate the possibility of emotional or physical strain that the instrument may place on the respondents.

The delivery mechanism may influence the completion rate as well. Mailing may take more time and increase the possibility of forgetting to respond. Telephone and in-clinic surveys can produce a higher response rate[75] but also increase expense[76]. It has been shown that computer-assisted administration of a survey is acceptable to cancer patients who are receiving treatments.[77, 78] We believe computer-assisted interactive needs assessment programs can potentially decrease expense and time of collecting needed information, improve ease of use, and possibly yield immediate tailored feedback. It can be conducted as a routine part of the intervention over the disease course. We would urge an investigation of the feasibility of computer-assisted needs assessment.

Of particular note are the few instruments designed to assess the needs of cancer patients/families during the "prevention," "survivorship" and "bereavement" stages. It is valuable to know the needs of people at risk of cancer who are undergoing prevention. However, there is little understanding of the needs of those with a family history of cancer. The ISNQ, the only instrument we found pertaining to a cancer prevention stage, is a good demonstration of an instrument assessing needs of women who have primary relatives with breast cancer.

No instruments targeting the survivorship and bereavement stages were found in our review. Cancer survivors should still receive support according to their needs; thus, more work should be undertaken for cancer survivorship needs assessment. Also, research focusing on caregivers/families who lost a loved one with cancer has not been fully explored. In particular, longitudinal studies conducted from the pre-bereavement to the post-bereavement period are rare. The grief experiences and needs of cancer families should receive monitoring and intervention over the disease course of their loved one, until a period of time after the death. Bereavement instrument research should also incorporate the special needs of younger women and men whose loved one died from cancer.

Needs assessment offers a rich opportunity to more fully understand the experiences of patients and their families. It is a crucial step in prioritizing the allocation of resources to improve quality of care. In our review, each selected instrument meets some but not all of our criteria for validity, reliability, responsiveness and burden. It is questionable whether any instrument can be developed meeting all the requirements as a ideal tool. However, we believe an ideal needs assessment tool would be one that opens the communication channel between patients/families and the professionals. In an era of limited resources, needs assessment should yield information that directs professionals on where and how to prioritize and focus improvement efforts.- At the same time, needs assessment should give patients and families a chance to identify and express the issues they want recognized and addressed by professionals.

Figure 6
figure 6

Relationship of needs to satisfaction and quality of life

Figure 7
figure 7

Search and selection process

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Wen, KY., Gustafson, D.H. Needs Assessment for cancer patients and their families. Health Qual Life Outcomes 2, 11 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-7525-2-11

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