On 2015 Oct 21, James C Coyne commented:
I am delighted that your group has formed a PubMed Commons Journal Club and you have selected our article for comment. Hopefully my colleagues will respond as well, but here are my reactions.
Our study grew out of an ambitious dissertation project in which the PhD student sought to implement best practices for recruiting a consecutive sample. Rather than obtaining the anticipated sample size, her effort stands as a cautionary note for anyone who would consider mounting such a randomized trial as part of a PhD effort without a lot of resources that are typically available.
I would now suggest that if a PhD student wishes to conduct an evaluation of an intervention largely on their own, they should stick to evaluating the feasibility and acceptability, not expecting to accrue enough patience for an adequately powered estimate of effect size. We have far too many underpowered studies claiming to produce effect sizes that, in the end, are not reliable.
Because recruitment for our study was not part of routine care, assent had to be obtained for approaching patients.
The Dutch practice of talking to every patient who wants a discussion is admirable, butit is not screening. Throughout medical practice, screening involves making decisions about who will have a further discussion based on their obtaining a score above a cutpoint. Indeed, if taken seriously and literally, the widely touted international standards for screening threaten an excellent, well-established Dutch practice.
I think that your comments, like a lot of the conventional understanding of cancer patients' interest in psychotherapy, reflect an overoptimism about their uptake. Our experience is actually quite consistent with other data that suggest interest in psychotherapy or counseling is a lot lower than generally assumed.
With more resources, perhaps we could have relied on touchscreen assessments, but I doubt the yield would be much better than what we obtained.
There is no evidence that systematic and routine screening for distress of cancer patients produces are better outcome than simply allowing patients access to services without the intervening screening. However, a large number of studies demonstrate that most patients who are interested in psychological services are not distressed enough to register an effect of receipt of those services. That is quite a dilemma.
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