| Literature DB >> 31933130 |
Niall Byrne1, Jacqueline Turner1, Rita Marron1, Deborah M Lambert1, Daniel N Murphy1, Grace O'Sullivan1,2, Maureen Mason1, Frank Broderick3, Mary C Burke4, Sheila Casey5, Marguerite Doyle6, David Gibney7, Fergus Mason8, David Molony9, Deirdre Ormond10, Colm O' Sé11, Conor O'Shea12, Eileen P Treacy13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: 'Slaintecare' aims to address complex patient care needs in an integrated fashion with an emphasis on patient-centred, patient-empowered community care.Currently there is a lack of knowledge of the impact of rare disease management in primary care and of the information tools required by general practitioners to deliver integrated care for rare disease patients. AIMS: To complete a pilot survey to estimate the general practice clinical workload attributable to selected rare diseases and assess the use of relevant information sources.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical coding; General practitioners; Integrated delivery of healthcare; Patient care management; Rare diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31933130 PMCID: PMC7363724 DOI: 10.1007/s11845-019-02168-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ir J Med Sci ISSN: 0021-1265 Impact factor: 1.568
Estimated European prevalence rates of the 22 selected Rare Diseases
| Rare disease name | Estimated prevalence (per 100,000) |
|---|---|
Congenital isolated hyperinsulinism Scleroderma (systemic sclerosis, localised sclerosis) Familial QT syndrome (Inc. Romano Ward) Primary systemic amyloidosis Retinitis pigmentosa Fragile X Neurofibromatosis 1 Marfan syndrome Sickle cell anaemia Sarcoidosis Haemophilia Huntington’s disease and rare neurodegenerative disease Phenylketonuria 22q11.2 Deletion syndrome (DiGeorge syndrome) Duchenne or Becker muscular dystrophy Prader-Willi syndrome Epidermolysis bullosa Mucopolysaccharidosis (type 2) Rare ataxias (including Friedreich’s) Tuberous sclerosis Osteogenesis imperfecta Motor neuron disease | 2.0 42.0 40.0 30.0 26.7 32.5 21.3 15.0 22.0 12.5 7.7 2.7 10.0 37.5 4.78 3.1 2.2 10.0 2.0 12. 10.0 3.85 |
Estimates provided from the Orphanet Report Series
P = prevalence; BP = birth prevalence
*Estimates shown are for epidermolysis bullosa simplex and Friedreich’s Ataxia
Demographic features of the 171 Irish rare disease patients (2013–2017) surveyed from ten primary care practices
| Variable | Rare disease patients | |
|---|---|---|
| (%) | ||
| Gender | ||
| Male | 92 | (54) |
| Female | 79 | (46) |
| Age (years) at time of survey | ||
| ≥ 18 | 141 | (82) |
| < 18 | 30 | (18) |
| Age (years) when diagnosed with RD ( | ||
| ≥ 18 | 118 | (69) |
| < 18 | 53 | (31) |
| Healthcare funding eligibility | ||
| State-reimbursed care | 97 | (57) |
| Not state-reimbursed | 74 | (43) |
n = number of patients.
Ages ranged from 3 to 85 years old
Preferred resources used by 31 surveyed Irish general practitioners to source rare disease information (2013–2017)
| Resource(s) used | General practitioners | |
|---|---|---|
| % | ||
GP Notebook Specialist letter Medscape Royal College Hospital in Melbourne App Registered Charities Information from patient British Medical Journal Best Practice Journals | 15 13 11 10 9 8 8 8 4 3 | (17) (15) (12) (11) (10) (9) (9) (9) (4) (3) |