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  2. Patient-reported outcome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient-reported_outcome

    The latter will only qualify as a PRO, however, if the interviewer is gaining the patient's views and not using the responses to make a professional assessment or judgment of the impact of a treatment on the patient's condition. Thus, PROs are used as a means of gathering patient- rather than clinical- or other outcomes perspectives.

  3. Response evaluation criteria in solid tumors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Response_Evaluation...

    Patients in response categories 4-9 should be considered as failing to respond to treatment (disease progression). Thus, an incorrect treatment schedule or drug administration does not result in exclusion from the analysis of the response rate. Precise definitions for categories 4-9 will be protocol specific.

  4. Progress note - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progress_note

    Another example is the DART system, organized into Description, Assessment, Response, and Treatment. [2] Documentation of care and treatment is an extremely important part of the treatment process. Progress notes are written by both physicians and nurses to document patient care on a regular interval during a patient's hospitalization.

  5. Clinical endpoint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinical_endpoint

    The response rate is the percentage of patients on whom a therapy has some defined effect; for example, the cancer shrinks or disappears after treatment. [ 9 ] When used as a clinical endpoint for trials of cancer treatments, this is often called the objective response rate (ORR).

  6. Therapeutic effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therapeutic_effect

    Therapeutic effect refers to the response(s) after a treatment of any kind, the results of which are judged to be useful or favorable. [1] [2] [3] This is true whether the result was expected, unexpected, or even an unintended consequence. An adverse effect (including nocebo) is the converse

  7. Nursing diagnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nursing_diagnosis

    The NANDA-I system of nursing diagnosis provides for four categories and each has 3 parts: diagnostic label or the human response, related factors or the cause of the response, and defining characteristics found in the selected patient are the signs/symptoms present that are supporting the diagnosis.

  8. Cure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cure

    Treatments don't always work. For example, chemotherapy is a treatment for cancer, but it may not work for every patient. In easily cured forms of cancer, such as childhood leukaemia's, testicular cancer and Hodgkin lymphoma, cure rates may approach 90%. [9] In other forms, treatment may be essentially impossible.

  9. Drug rehabilitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_rehabilitation

    Treatment can be a long process and the duration is dependent upon the patient's needs and history of substance use. Research has shown that most patients need at least three months of treatment and longer durations are associated with better outcomes. [3] Prescription drug addiction does not discriminate.