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JCO Early Release, published online ahead of print Oct 20 2008
Journal of Clinical Oncology, 10.1200/JCO.2007.15.2322

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Received November 21, 2007
Accepted July 8, 2008

Does Age Really Matter? Recall of Information Presented to Newly Referred Patients With Cancer

Jesse Jansen,* Phyllis N. Butow, Julia C.M. van Weert, Sandra van Dulmen, Rhonda J. Devine, Thea J. Heeren, Jozien M. Bensing, and Martin H.N. Tattersall

From the Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research, and Department of Health Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht; Amsterdam School of Communications Research, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam; Symfora Group, Centers for Mental Health Care, Amersfoort, the Netherlands; and Medical Psychology Research Unit, School of Psychology/Department of Cancer Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: j.jansen{at}nivel.nl

Purpose: To examine age- and age-related differences in recall of information provided during oncology consultations.

Patients and Methods: Two hundred sixty patients with cancer diagnosed with heterogeneous cancers, seeing a medical or radiation oncologist for the first time, participated in the study. Patients completed questionnaires assessing information needs and anxiety. Recall of information provided was measured using a structured telephone interview in which patients were prompted to remember details physicians gave about diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment. Recall was checked against the actual communication in audio-recordings of the consultations.

Results: Recall decreased significantly with age, but only when total amount of information presented was taken into account. This indicates that if more information is discussed, older patients have more trouble remembering the information than younger ones. In addition, recall was selectively influenced by prognosis. First, patients with a poorer prognosis recalled less. Next, the more information was provided about prognosis, the less information patients recalled, regardless of their actual prognosis.

Conclusion: Recall is not simply a function of patient age. Age only predicts recall when controlling for amount of information presented. Both prognosis and information about prognosis are better predictors of recall than age. These results provide important insights into intervention strategies to improve information recall in patients with cancer.


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