Intervention improves quality of life in young adults with cancer

Young adults with a first cancer diagnosis experienced improvements in health-related quality of life with help from a one-on-one intervention focused on problem-solving, according to a study published in JAMA Network Open.
Specifically, participants of the six-session Bright IDEAS-YA program experienced decreased depression and anxiety symptoms at 6 months, Katie A. Devine, PhD, MPH, associate director of the New Jersey Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Research Center of Excellence at Rutgers Cancer Institute, and colleagues wrote.
“Bright IDEAS participants felt less overwhelmed and more




