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      Cancer Rehabilitation Evaluation System Questionnaire: A Disease-specific and Treatment-specific Measure of Rehabilitation Needs and Self-reported Quality of Life

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          Abstract

          Sir, I would like to appreciate the leadership role played by the Indian Journal of Palliative Care in establishing evidence for evaluation tools in terms of their psychometric properties for use in palliative and end-of-life care settings in developing countries.[1] This letter to editor introduces readers of IJPC to Cancer Rehabilitation Evaluation System (CARES), a self-reported questionnaire for assessment of rehabilitation needs and quality of life in cancer survivors. CARES is the first of its kind tool, for evaluating quality of life from disease-specific and treatment-specific perspectives, among cancer survivors. Maintaining “quality of life” for a cancer patient is analogous to caring for the “whole” patient which should include integration of multispecialty services, on-going patient education, attention to supportive care, and efforts to achieve organ preservation.[2] Patients’ feelings, psychological and functional status, and quality of life have often been regarded as unmeasurable subjective entities that cannot be scientifically studied.[3] Keeping the above-mentioned challenges in mind, Schag and Heinrich[4] developed a cancer-specific rehabilitation and treatment planning questionnaire, CARES (CAncer Rehabilitation Evaluation System). CARES is a comprehensive, reliable, valid, cost-efficient and pertinent to patients’ quality of life. The CARES was adapted for research settings and a computer-based scoring and professional reporting system was available to clinicians with access to IBM compatible personal computers. Evidence for CARES was established by Ganz et al.[5] who reviewed studies on CARES, and presented data to demonstrate that the CARES was a generic measure of health-related quality of life, suitable for use in cancer. The CARES performed well across doifferent cancer sites and phases of the disease. CARES was also responsive to changes in health-related quality of life over time. Considering the practical difficulties in application of CARES, a shorter version of the instrument was developed as CAncer Rehabilitation Evaluation System-short form (CARES-SF). Schag et al.[6] described the development and psychometric properties of the CARES-SF and their findings demonstrated that the CARES-SF was highly related to the CARES, had excellent test-retest reliability, concurrent validity with related measures, and acceptable internal consistency of summary scales. Subsequently, te Velde et al.[7] investigated the validity and reliability of the CARES-SF on 485 cancer patients who completed the CARES-SF before treatment (T1), 1 month later (T2), and 3 months following T2 (T3), with a sub-sample of patients completing the CARES-SF a fourth time (T4) 1 week following T3, for purposes of test-retest reliability estimation. Internal consistency was high for four of six multi-item scales; test-retest reliability for the six scales were also high; selective scales distinguished clearly between patients differing in disease stage, performance status, treatment modality and tumor response; and they were also responsive to changes in health status over time. Hjermstad et al.[8] studied the rehabilitation needs after high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) in 130 cancer patients treated with HDC and allogeneic (SCT) or autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT). The SCT group had better psychosocial subscale scores at the 6 and 12-month assessments, as well as better satisfaction on the marital subscale 6 months post-transplant. The CARES and CARES-SF appeared to be two promising evaluation tools that could be used in palliative care settings, to measure disease-specific and care-specific quality of life in cancer survivors, and this poses a huge opportunity for palliative care clinicians and researchers in developing countries to implement and establish further evidence respectively. With only few studies describing application of CARES and/or CARES-SF in oncology settings, can palliative care physicians and rehabilitation professionals co-operate in evaluating the rehabilitation needs and quality of life in cancer survivors in developing countries using either CARES or CARES-SF?

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          CAncer Rehabilitation Evaluation System--short form (CARES-SF). A cancer specific rehabilitation and quality of life instrument.

          The CAncer Rehabilitation Evaluation System (CARES) (CARES Consultants, Santa Monica, CA) a rehabilitation and quality of life instrument with well-documented reliability and validity, has been shortened. This report describes the development and psychometric properties of the new instrument, the CAncer Rehabilitation Evaluation System--Short Form (CARES-SF). The data from four existing samples of cancer patients demonstrate that the CARES-SF is highly related to the CARES (r = 0.98), has excellent test-retest reliability (86% agreement), concurrent validity with related measures, and acceptable internal consistency of summary scales (alpha = 0.85 to 0.61). In a new sample of breast cancer patients evaluated at three points in time (1 month, 7 months, and 13 months after diagnosis) the instrument appears to be sensitive to change and is highly related to the Functional Living Index--Cancer (FLIC), an existing quality of life instrument. The authors conclude that the CARES-SF has excellent potential as a quality of life instrument for use in clinical trials.
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            The CARES: a generic measure of health-related quality of life for patients with cancer.

            In spite of the prevalence of neoplastic disorders as a cause of chronic illness, very few of the currently available generic measures of health-related quality of life or health status have been utilized with cancer patients. In this paper we reviewed our studies with the Cancer Rehabilitation Evaluation System (CARES), a cancer-specific measure of rehabilitation needs and quality of life. We present data to demonstrate that the CARES is a generic measure of health-related quality of life, suitable for use in the many different diseases called cancer. The data that form the basis for this paper were collected during a decade of research on the CARES. This paper represents the first discussion of the performance of the CARES across separate cancer sites and phases of the disease. In addition, we demonstrated that the CARES is responsive to changes in health-related quality of life over time. Finally, we will discuss the application of the CARES in clinical and research settings.
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              Development of a comprehensive quality of life measurement tool: CARES.

              The authors present a cancer specific rehabilitation and treatment planning questionnaire and a computer scoring and reporting evaluation system, the CARES. CARES stands for CAncer Rehabilitation Evaluation System. It is a unique instrument and research to date suggests that it is comprehensive, reliable, valid, and pertinent to patients' quality of life, as they live with cancer. The CARES provides a cost-efficient method of evaluating patients' needs and can serve as a valuable adjunct to medical care. The CARES has been adapted for research settings as well, and has a short form for multiple administrations. Finally, a computer scoring and professional reporting system is available to clinicians with access to IBM compatible personal computers.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Indian J Palliat Care
                Indian J Palliat Care
                IJPC
                Indian Journal of Palliative Care
                Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd (India )
                0973-1075
                1998-3735
                Sep-Dec 2014
                : 20
                : 3
                : 243-244
                Affiliations
                [1]Maharishi Markandeshwar Institute of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Maharishi Markandeshwar University, Mullana-Ambala, Haryana, India
                [1 ]Department of Psychiatry, Kasturba Medical College, Manipal University, Mangalore, India
                [2 ]Srinivas College of Physiotherapy and Research Centre, Pandeshwar, Mangalore, India
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Prof. Senthil P Kumar; E-mail: senthilparamasivamkumar@ 123456gmail.com
                Article
                IJPC-20-243
                10.4103/0973-1075.138403
                4154175
                0b4bcd68-3a5d-4c6a-90a9-f3f5403b7c33
                Copyright: © Indian Journal of Palliative Care

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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                Letters to Editor

                Anesthesiology & Pain management
                Anesthesiology & Pain management

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