Depression, Anxiety, Stress Symptoms and Health-Related Quality of Life in Hemodialysis Patients: Cross-Sectional Findings from a Romanian Cohort
Adriana-Luciana Luca, Felicia Militaru, Cristina Mariana Văduva, Ilie-Robert Dinu, Daniela Teodora Maria, Mădălina Iuliana Mușat, Virginia Maria Rădulescu, Ion Udriștoiu, Eugen Moța

TL;DR
This study finds high rates of psychological distress and poor physical quality of life among Romanian hemodialysis patients, suggesting the need for routine mental health screening.
Contribution
The study provides one of the first detailed characterizations of psychological distress and HRQoL in an Eastern European hemodialysis cohort.
Findings
48% of patients reported mild depressive symptoms, 34.4% anxiety, and 44% stress symptoms.
Physical HRQoL was significantly impaired (PCS 36.5 ± 9.6), while mental HRQoL was relatively preserved.
Stress symptoms were independently associated with lower mental HRQoL, though explained variance was limited.
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and maintenance hemodialysis (HD) are frequently associated with psychological distress and impaired health-related quality of life (HRQoL). However, the relationships between depressive, anxiety, and stress symptoms, clinical factors, and HRQoL remain insufficiently understood in routine care. This study aimed to assess the prevalence of psychological distress and to explore cross-sectional correlates of kidney disease-specific and generic HRQoL in Romanian patients receiving long-term HD, providing one of the first detailed characterizations of these relationships in an Eastern European maintenance HD cohort. Materials and Methods: This single-center cross-sectional study included 125 adult patients undergoing maintenance HD for at least one year. Baseline assessment comprised socioeconomic, demographic and clinical and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDialysis and Renal Disease Management · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness · Biological Research and Disease Studies
