| Literature DB >> 28733824 |
Daphne Esquivel-Sada1, Minh Thu Nguyen2.
Abstract
This paper presents an in-depth qualitative analysis of the impact of diagnosis on the lives of rare disease (RD) patients. While diagnosis may be described as a watershed step for RD patients, no extensive account of non-medical outcomes following a RD diagnosis exists within the literature. This study aims to fill this knowledge gap through an analysis of the impact of diagnosis on the lives of RD patients according to their personal experiences. Qualitative research was conducted in three provinces across Canada, with a total of 23 participants, both adult and parents of children with RD, diagnosed and not yet diagnosed. A thematic approach guided the analysis of the transcripts. The results reveal that the impacts of a RD diagnosis for both adults and paediatric patients are multifold, ranging from social to personal and medical impacts (including cases where etiological treatments for the diseases are non-existent). Furthermore, the results shed light on distinct factors that affect the scope of impacts of a diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis impacts; Genetics; Patients’ experiences; Qualitative analysis; Rare disease community
Year: 2017 PMID: 28733824 PMCID: PMC5752651 DOI: 10.1007/s12687-017-0320-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Genet ISSN: 1868-310X
Participants socio-demographics and patient information
| Discussions | Participant information (data for all adult patients and parents who participated in FG) | Patient information (data for all adult and children RD patients) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Age | Education | Received RD dx | Genetic based RD | |
| II-F | Female | 29 | University | Yes | Yes |
| FG-A-E | Female | 36 | University | Yes | Yes |
| Female | 51 | Masters | Yes | Unknown | |
| Female | 44 | University | Yes | No | |
| FG-A-F | Female | 35 | University | Yes | Yes |
| Female | 52 | University | Yes | Yes | |
| Female | 42 | High school | Yes | Yes | |
| FG-MIX-F | Female P | 35 | College | No | NA |
| Female P | 37 | College | Yes | Yes | |
| Female P | 27 | High school | Yes | Yes | |
| Female A | 33 | High school | Yes | Yes | |
| FG-P-F | Female | 44 | College | Yes | Unknown |
| Yes | Yes | ||||
| Female | 48 | University | Yes | Yes | |
| Malea | 58 | PhD | Yes | Yes | |
| Yes | Yes | ||||
| Femalea | 59 | University | Same as participant above | Same as participant above | |
| FG-P-E1 | Female | 53 | College | Yes | Yes |
| Yes | Yes | ||||
| Female | 27 | College | No | NA | |
| Female | 52 | University | Yes | Yes | |
| Female | 56 | University | Yes | Yes | |
| Female | 34 | College | Yes | Yes | |
| FG-P-E2 | Female | 54 | University | Yes | Yes |
| Female | 41 | University | Yes | Yes | |
| Female | 57 | Not available | Yes | Yes | |
| Total | Participants = 23 (8 adults, 15 parents) | Patients cases = 25 | |||
II individual adult interview, P parent of paediatric patient, A adult patient, F French, E English, MIX parent and adult patient FG, NA not applicable
aIndicates a couple whose adult children are affected by the same disease as the mother.
Summary of impacts of a diagnosis for RD patients
| Medical impacts |
| • Medical intervention: a diagnosis may allow receiving proper treatment while avoiding “mistreatments” |
| • Health care: a diagnosis tends to ease access to health care but may also present new obstacles for patients |
| • Age-based asymmetry between paediatric and adult patients: access to medical and support services tends to vary for paediatric patients compared to those diagnosed as adults |
| • Indirect health-related impacts: a diagnosis may result in lifestyle changes for the patient |
| Social impacts |
| • A diagnosis allows access to ancillary public services (social welfare, subsidies for special health care and needs) |
| • A diagnosis can provide a means to connect with specific RD support groups |
| •A diagnosis may entail insurance discrimination and stigmatization |
| Personal impacts |
| •A diagnosis allows patient empowerment, self-confidence, and a gain of respect vis-à-vis medical professionals |
| •A diagnosis may offer relevant information for life planning and reproductive decision-making |
| • A diagnosis (or the medical acknowledgement) of a genetic condition may spur family conflicts |