Unmet supportive care needs, health status and minimum costs in survivors of malignant melanoma

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Abstract

We explored the relationship between unmet care needs, health status, health utility and costs in people treated for melanoma via a cross-sectional follow-up survey (N = 455) 3 months to 5 years after complete resection of stage I–III cutaneous malignant melanoma. 51% (n = 232) had unmet care needs. This group had higher mean resource use, estimated conservatively (£28 vs. £10 per person) and worse overall health. Mean health-related utility index (AQoL6D) was 0.763 (95% CI 0.74; 0.79) in those with self-reported unmet need vs. 0.903 (0.89; 0.92) in those with no unmet need. Melanoma survivors with unmet need had worse outcomes in terms of anxiety (HADS 6.86 vs. 4.29), depression (HADS 4.29 vs. 2.01), overall quality of life (QoL: FACT-M 84.2 vs. 96.5). Higher resource use was associated with younger age (rs = −.29, p

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Davies, L. M., Hayhurst, K. P., Lorigan, P., & Molassiotis, A. (2018). Unmet supportive care needs, health status and minimum costs in survivors of malignant melanoma. European Journal of Cancer Care, 27(2). https://doi.org/10.1111/ecc.12811

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