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Stability and Priority of Symptoms and Symptom Clusters Among Allogeneic HSCT Patients Within a 5-Year Longitudinal Study Peter Esser, MS, Katharina Kuba, MS, Angela Scherwath, PhD, Christoffer Johansen, MD, Anke Schwinn, MS, Lena Schirmer, PhD, Frank Schulz-Kindermann, PhD, Margitta Kruse, MS, Uwe Koch, PhD, Axel Rolf Zander, MD, Nicolaus Kröger, MD, Heide Götze, PhD, Anja Mehnert, PhD Journal of Pain and Symptom Management Volume 54, Issue 4, Pages (October 2017) DOI: /j.jpainsymman Copyright © 2017 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine Terms and Conditions
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Fig. 1 Percentage of patients for which the respective symptom was stable (percentages based on patients who were assessed across the first three or all time points: n = 102). A symptom was defined as stable when it was rated present (rated with “little” or above) at a minimum of three consecutive time points. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management , DOI: ( /j.jpainsymman ) Copyright © 2017 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine Terms and Conditions
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Fig. 2 Priority in symptom management: The more a symptom or SC is placed in the upper right, the higher its priority in symptom management. Severity can take values between 1 and 4; regression coefficients are reported as absolute values. SC EX = exhausted symptom cluster (rest-weak-tired-dyspnea-appetite); SC AF = affective symptom cluster (worried-tense-irritable-depressed); SC GI = gastrointestinal symptom cluster (nausea-vomiting). Journal of Pain and Symptom Management , DOI: ( /j.jpainsymman ) Copyright © 2017 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine Terms and Conditions
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