| Literature DB >> 23078166 |
Heidi Lempp1, Darija Hofmann, Stephani L Hatch, David L Scott.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Combinations of disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) are increasingly used to control active rheumatoid arthritis (RA); however there is little information about patients' perspectives, their expectations, concerns and experiences of this intensive treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23078166 PMCID: PMC3524760 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-13-200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Socio-demographic characteristics of study cohort (=18 participants)
| 14 women, 4 men | |
| Range: 21–70 years, mean: 49 years, median: 50 years | |
| 1 Asian; 1 Black African; 1 Black British;1 British Bengali; 1 Caribbean; 1 Columbian; 11 White British/English; 1 Welsh | |
| Employed full-time | |
| Yes: 12; No: 6 | |
| 1966-2011 (2007) | |
| 8 patients/10 patients | |
| 13 patients/5 patients with RA | |
| 4 - 96 months (36 months) |
Random examples of accounts of met and unmet expectations of 6/18 patients who commenced on combination therapy
| ‘I thought it could not work for me, but in fact it did, the most scaring thing for me was not being able to walk or not being able to do anything. But now… I can do a lot of things that I could not do before, well, housework, vacuum cleaning, cooking, and a lot of few bits that I am happy to do. (Patient 4, established RA) | ‘I am a bit disappointed now, the pain is sort of coming back more strongly now; and I had my jab [steroid injection] today…I find it difficult to walk, and my ankles get weak and in my fingers I don’t have the strength’. (Pilot Patient 1, established RA) |
| ‘My main expectations are: being able to sleep through the night and not being woken at 3am in the morning in pain, ability to work, I have to function and clarity of mind; I suppose that these are the important improvements I expect from the treatment’. (Patient 7, established RA) | ‘I was expecting to get better, like giving me more freedom with my health, mobility is the main thing and I think if you are in pain your mood is different and it changes, you feel you are not well yourself’. (Patient 3, early RA) |
| ‘When I started taking the medicines at the beginning, they started working immediately. I thought I would feel better very, very soon and it happened [mobility fatigue], so I think all my expectations were met’. (Patient 12, established RA) | ‘The combination therapy has helped, but not as much as I hoped it would. I think I was hoping for a miraculous change [pain, mobility] and it did not happen’. (Patient 8, established RA) |
Random examples of statements about whether combination therapy is working by 6/18 participants
| ‘I can move easier and some days I do not even remember that I got RA’. (Patient 13) | ‘I would have thought the ‘good’ period lasted 5–6 months, apart from the feet. But the hands, you know, swelling up again, but in the initial stages I’ve got to say it [combination therapy] did help, definitely’. (Patient 3) | ‘When I take the medication I do not feel any |
| ‘Stiffness and pain level is much better than it was, and generally the scores [ESR and Disease Activity Score] and the feelings are the same’. (Patient 10) | ‘The treatment is working, I am pain free and do not have so much deformity.. I find it easier to pull myself out of the bath, but there again I have been given a steroid injection, and the steroid does help’. (Pilot Patient 2) | ‘Stiffness and pain are the same since I started the combined treatment’. (Pilot Patient 1) |
Random examples of expressed concerns about side effects of combination medication, divided into 5 categories by 5/18 patients
| Ambivalence | ‘I had some concerns about the side effects, but at the same time I had no choice, because that is what I have to take in order to improve my situation… so I was willing to go along with it [medication]’. (Patient 13, early RA) |
| Physical problems (long-term) | ‘I wanted to know whether it would affect the organs in my body, because I have had chest x-rays and things like that, and I have blood test every month. I always worry about what would happen to my inner organs’. (Patient 8, established RA) |
| Worries about cancer | ‘In the back of my mind I am worried about getting a cancer or tumour, because I am thinking I am getting quite immune suppressed.’ (Patient 7, established RA) |
| Uncertainty about treatment failure | ‘I do not find the treatment helped at all, as I still got pain, the drugs are not controlling the RA…I can only see the situation getting worse’. (Patient 15, early RA). |
| Number of medication | ‘I mean at the beginning I was a bit concerned about the medication MTX, ahm… but the ones I am now on, I am OK about.. I just think: there are so many tablets to take’. (Patient 6 early RA) |
Random examples of accounts how participants (7/18) manage their combined medication and blood monitoring
| Pilot Patient 1 | ‘I get used to the tablets and everything and I get used to the injections now as well. So I take MTX on a Wednesday, the injections on a Wednesday and the Folic Acid on a Friday.. I have done it for couple of years now, so I got used to it’. |
| Patient 3 | ‘I take one tablet [Leflunomide] every day in the morning and the other one [MTX] I take once a week on Saturdays. When I take MTX, I take it in the morning, and the other one in the afternoon, because I was concerned about mixing both medications at once, so I always keep some time in between. I do not forget the tablets, because once you are sick you know that you depend on this medication, I always remember and my husband is always asking me whether I have taken my medication’. |
| Patient 5 | ‘Monday is the day when I take MTX and inject Enbrel under the skin. I call it my ‘bad day’, because I know I have to inject myself, and I hate it. I call it my ‘bad day’ like many working people talk about Monday is their worst day! I take the Folic Acid on Wednesday and that is me done for the rest of the week. The monthly blood taking is the down side of this new treatment, it is a real pain’. |
| Patient 6 | ‘I put like a timer on my phone to remind me, so I remember to take them [medication]. I got other tablets to take with it [RA medication], I just find it a lot of medication to be taken every day, as I said I got high blood pressure as well… it is hard, it is kind of like make myself do it…I feel like a walking chemist sometimes’. |
| Patient 7 | ‘I know my colleagues laughed when I told them that I went to Boots to buy a Dosette Box. I would be lost without my Dosette Box and ‘Pharmacy to you’, these are my two things…it was easier to have a Dosette Box going on holiday, instead of taking umpteen bottles, and keeping it away from a toddler; when I go out for dinner, I grab my evening tablets all at once with me in the handbag’. |
| Patient 14 | ‘It is a torture really, because I struggle a lot to get the medications out [of the package], even though I get help sometimes’. |
| Patient 16 | ‘The blood monitoring is easy; I just go to the GP. For my injections I actually went to the hospital and was taught how to do it and so that is all fine, no problem’. |