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Quality of life

About: Quality of life is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 42912 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1198363 citations. The topic is also known as: life quality.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Behavior of a number of Quality of Life measures gathered from two samples of terminal cancer patients over the last weeks of their lives are reported, with the general finding one of increasing deterioration in quality of life, with accelerated deterioration between 3 and 1 week of death.

219 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Optizing nutrition intake, (home) rehabilitation programmes, and the possibility for psychological counselling in patients with difficulties in the psychosocial dimensions would be recommended after hip fracture surgery and postoperative treatment options.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: With an increasing ageing population, hip fractures have become a major public health issue in the elderly. It is important to examine the health status (HS) and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of the elderly faced with the epidemic of hip fractures. OBJECTIVE: To provide an overview of reported HS and HRQOL in elderly patients with a hip fracture. DESIGN: A systematic literature search was performed in Embase, Medline, Web of Science, Scopus, CINAHL, Cochrane, PsycINFO, Pubmed, and Google Scholar in July 2014. Studies which reported the HS or HRQOL based on standardised questionnaires in patients older than 65 years with a hip fracture were considered eligible for inclusion. RESULTS: After inspecting the 2725 potentially eligible studies, 49 fulfilled the inclusion criteria. All included studies were randomised controlled trials or prospective cohort studies. The methodological quality of the studies was moderate. Patients' functioning on the physical, social, and emotional domains were affected after a hip fracture. The HS and HRQOL of the majority of patients recovered in the first 6 months after fracture. However, their HS did not return to prefracture level. Mental state, prefracture functioning on physical and psychosocial domains, comorbidity, female gender, nutritional status, postoperative pain, length of hospital stay, and complications were factors associated with HS or HRQOL. Treatment with total hip arthroplasty or hemi-arthroplasty provided better HS than treatment with internal fixation with displaced femoral neck fractures. Supportive psychotherapy in "low-functioning" patients, (home) rehabilitation programmes and nutritional supplementation appeared to have beneficial effects on HS. CONCLUSIONS: Optimizing nutrition intake, (home) rehabilitation programmes, and the possibility for psychological counselling in patients with difficulties in the psychosocial dimensions would be recommended after hip fracture surgery. Besides HS questionnaires like EQ-5D and SF-36, adequate measurements like the WHOQOL-Bref or ICECAP-O are warranted in future studies regarding hip fracture surgery and postoperative treatment options.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Language: en

219 citations

01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the ability of a four-item Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) scale to predict short-term and long-term (1-year) physician visits, hospitalization, and mortality among older adults.
Abstract: Background and aims: This investigation examined the ability of a four-item Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) scale to predict short-term (30-day) and long-term (1-year) physician visits, hospitalization, and mortality among older adults. Methods: Subjects included 84065 individuals aged 65 and older who completed a mail version of the Centers for Diseases Control's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) Core HRQOL Module. HRQOL dimensions represented by the module include global self-rated general health, recent physical health, recent mental health, and recent activity limitation. Results: In analysis of covariance models controlling for demographic factors and comorbidity, the number of physician visits within 30 days and 1 year differed significantly across categories of each HRQOL item. In Cox regression models controlling for the same covariates, all four HRQOL questions were significant predictors of 30-day and 1-year hospitalization and mortality. Conclusions: These results signify that all four dimensions of HRQOL represented by the BRFSS Core HRQOL Module are important predictors of both short-term and long-term adverse health events among older adults. This brief scale may be particularly useful for assessing the health of older adults in clinical settings and large-scale epidemiological studies.

218 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that the high-risk state is characterised by consistent and large impairments of functioning and reduction in QoL similar to those in other coded psychiatric disorders.
Abstract: Background The nosology of the psychosis high-risk state is controversial. Traditionally conceived as an ‘at risk’ state for the development of psychotic disorders, it is also conceptualised as a clinical syndrome associated with functional impairment. Aims To investigate meta-analytically the functional status of patients at high clinical risk for psychosis and its association with longitudinal outcomes. Method Three meta-analyses compared level of functioning ( n = 3012) and quality of life (QoL) ( n = 945) between a high-risk group, a healthy control group and group with psychosis, and baseline functioning in people in the high-risk group who did or did not have a transition to psychosis at follow-up ( n = 654). Results People at high risk had a large impairment in functioning ( P <0.001) and worse QoL ( P = 0.001) than the healthy control group, but only small to moderately better functioning ( P = 0.012) and similar QoL ( P = 0.958) compared with the psychosis group. Among the high-risk group, those who did not develop psychosis reported better functioning ( P = 0.001) than those who did. Conclusions Our results indicate that the high-risk state is characterised by consistent and large impairments of functioning and reduction in QoL similar to those in other coded psychiatric disorders.

218 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that cirrhosis is associated with a decreased HRQOL, especially at advanced stages, and increased severity of liver disease isassociated with decreased physical aspects of quality of life.
Abstract: Cirrhosis is associated with decrements in health-related quality of life (HRQOL), but the specific effects of encephalopathy, especially subclinical, on quality of life are incompletely understood. Therefore, the aim of our study was to define the effects of encephalopathy on specific domains of HRQOL in a sample of patients with advanced liver disease. The sample consisted of 160 patients with cirrhosis presenting for liver transplantation evaluation. Health-related quality of life was measured with the Short Form-36 questionnaire. Clinical, demographic, and laboratory data were collected. The presence and degree of encephalopathy was ascertained clinically and by the use of the Reitan trail test. HRQOL scores were compared according to liver disease severity and to the presence and degree of encephalopathy. In addition, scores were compared to US population norms. Data were obtained from 148 patients. Compared to the US general population, the physical and mental component summary scores were lower in patients with cirrhosis. Among patients with cirrhosis, there were no significant differences in the physical and mental component summary scores according to age, gender, ethnicity, and etiology (hepatocellular versus/ cholestatic and HCV versus non-HCV). Increasing severity of liver disease (based on the Child-Pugh score), a history of hospitalizations, and a history of ascites were associated with decreased physical component summary scores but not mental component summary scores. Patients with encephalopathy (overt and subclinical) had decreased physical and mental component summary scores compared to patients without encephalopathy. Compared to patients without encephalopathy, those with subclinical encephalopathy had a lower mental component summary score. In conclusion, cirrhosis is associated with a decreased HRQOL, especially at advanced stages. Increased severity of liver disease is associated with decreased physical aspects of quality of life. Overt hepatic encephalopathy negatively affects both physical and mental aspects of quality of life, whereas subclinical encephalopathy affects mainly the mental aspects, independently of liver disease severity.

218 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202234
20213,682
20203,334
20192,964
20182,699
20172,902