Monthly Archives: July 2010

Cancer-related Pain – Future Research

Randomized controlled trials have confirmed that many of the existing treatment modalities can reduce cancer-related pain on their own. However, scientific evidence related to cancer pain relief does not compare favorably with the voluminous amount of information pertaining to the usefulness and effectiveness of treatments meant for other types of serious conditions, including cancer itself.

Cancer-related Depression

There is a lot of variation in the literature related to reports of rates of depression among cancer patients. Even with standardized tools, wide variations can still be observed. One good option would be to carry out more prevalence studies that focus on examining the causes for these variations and factors responsible for the differing

Cancer-related Fatigue

Future research involving cancer-related fatigue must also include more exhaustive studies on the prevalence of fatigue in more complex environs that are characterized by a wide range of diseases and settings. Other requisites include longitudinal studies. Valuable prevalence data can be potentially extracted from studies that focus on health-related quality of life, common symptom surveys