| Literature DB >> 32982613 |
Carol A Mancuso1,2, Roland Duculan3, Deanna Jannat-Khah2,4,5, Medha Barbhaiya2,4, Anne R Bass2,4, Bella Mehta2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Systemic rheumatic diseases are characterized by diverse symptoms that are exacerbated by stressors. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: Our goal was to identify COVID-19-related stressors that patients associated with worsening rheumatic disease symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; fatigue; psychological stressors; qualitative; rheumatic diseases; symptom exacerbation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32982613 PMCID: PMC7500497 DOI: 10.1007/s11420-020-09798-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HSS J ISSN: 1556-3316
Fig. 1a Number of cases of COVID-19 in New York City in 2020 according to date. b Number of deaths due to COVID-19 in New York City in 2020 according to date.
Demographic and clinical characteristics (N = 112)
| Characteristics | Value |
|---|---|
| Women | 96 (86%) |
| Age, years (mean, range) | 50 (19–87) |
| Race | |
| White | 91 (81%) |
| Black | 12 (11%) |
| Asian | 9 (8%) |
| Latino ethnicity | 17 (15%) |
| Diagnosis | |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) | 34 (30%) |
| Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) | 30 (26%) |
| Undifferentiated connective tissue disorder UCTD) | 8 (7%) |
| Psoriatic arthritis | 8 (7%) |
| Sjogren’s syndrome | 4 (4%) |
| Mixed connective tissue disorder | 3 (3%) |
| Other * | 25 (23%) |
| Medications | |
| Conventional disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs | |
| Hydroxychloroquine | 58 (52%) |
| Glucocorticoids | 58 (52%) |
| Methotrexate | 17 (15%) |
| Azathioprine | 10 (9%) |
| Mycophenolate mofetil | 7 (6%) |
| Biologic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs | |
| Tumor necrosis factor inhibitor | 19 (17%) |
| Interleukin inhibitor | 12 (11%) |
| B cell activating factor inhibitor | 13 (12%) |
| B cell CD20 monoclonal antibody | 11 (10%) |
| T cell costimulatory signal inhibitor | 4 (3%) |
| Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor | 3 (3%) |
* Spondyloarthritis, SLE/UCTD overlap, Sjogrens/RA overlap, Polymyalgia rheumatic, Antiphospholipid syndrome/SLE overlap, Ankylosing spondylitis, small vessel vasculitis, SLE/Sjogrens overlap, Scleroderma, SLE/Scleroderma overlap, SLE/RA overlap, RA/PMR overlap, inflammatory polyarthralgia, eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis, Churg-Strauss syndrome, atypical polyarthritis nodosa, adult onset Still’s disease
Categories under the theme of increased fatigue and themes of musculoskeletal and cognitive limitations due to the COVID-19 pandemic
| Representative quotations from patients | |
| Multitasking | “This whole thing has turned my family life upside down. I was enjoying my empty nest. Now everybody is home. I am exhausted with the cooking and cleaning. This whole thing has greatly increased my fatigue.” |
| “I am a self-employed attorney. We have three children, ages 13, 11 and 9. I am the principal and teacher to our children. I am multitasking and am overwhelmed. I make lists and have more fatigue. I have never worked harder in my life.” | |
| “As a journalist, I need to be in the field sometimes. But what was done in the office, I now do from home. I have two children at home, I am doing more washing, cleaning and cooking and I am helping them with school work and trying to give them some exercise. Occasionally I have extreme fatigue.” | |
| “I was sick with COVID. On March 29 I got a cough and shortness of breath and went to urgent care and tested positive. My chest X-ray did not show pneumonia and I wasn’t sick enough to be hospitalized. Now I am trying to figure out my work and do home school with my son. If coronavirus does not kill me, the home school will.” | |
| Physical work | “We are 10 older sisters in the convent. We had a cook and a cleaning person, but had to let them go, so we all do extra now. We divide up the cooking responsibilities and chores. I get very tired.” |
| “My daughter and her family came to stay with us. My wife and I are now full-time caretakers for our grandchildren because my daughter and son-in-law have to work from home. My grandson is 3 years old and my granddaughter is 8 months. We are up at 6AM and asleep at 8 PM.” | |
| “I create projects around the house to keep my mind occupied, power washing, cleaning closets, the garage, finding things to do otherwise I am not productive, I need to do it for my mental health but I get very fatigued. Therefore it is not good physically but good mentally, it is hard to find a balance.” | |
| Work of taking precautions | “I wear a home-made mask and gloves, and I wash my hands a gazillion times a day. When I get home I remove my outdoor clothes, air them out, wash them quickly, and never wear those clothes inside.” |
| “I get Clorox into high places and not just surfaces. I told the cleaning person not to come and I do the cleaning myself. I wash my hands more than 20 times a day.” | |
| “I live in Manhattan but in March I went to live at my father’s place. It is in a retirement community away from the epicenter. But I then got the shingles because I was stressed and tired from moving.” | |
| Musculoskeletal and cognitive limitations | “I have a lot of symptoms. I am exhausted, my hands and feet are swollen and stiff; I usually push myself, but not now.” |
| “It is very important that I walk and exercise, but I cannot do that even in the hallways. I am trying to move around more in my apartment. My body is becoming sore, it is hard for me to move, my mobility is very decreased.” | |
| “I used to be a big walker and go to the gym for exercise, but now the gym is closed. I only walk half an hour a few days a week.” | |
| “I used to go for a water aerobics class, it was very helpful for my arthritis. But I do not do that now. I just stay at home.” | |
| “I have a shoulder problem and used to get PT; I cannot do this either now.” | |
| Impact on rheumatic diseases | “I have a flare now with fatigue and joint pain; I think it is from the increased stress.” |
| “In the beginning it was an emotional rollercoaster; my agency drastically changed in the first week. I developed a flare because stress is not my friend.” | |
| “I am trying not to get too stressed, stress is a trigger and causes flares.” | |
Categories of worry under the theme of psychological effects due to the COVID-19 pandemic
| Categories | Representative quotations from patients |
|---|---|
| Worry about contractingSARS-CoV-2 | “Because we are immunocompromised from our condition we are more susceptible to any infections. Our medications make us increased risk. We could get it and be sicker than the average person.” |
| “This virus is extremely deadly. I have an underlying condition that makes me susceptible at a higher rate, because of this I am worried I might not make it through.” | |
| “COVID causes a misfiring of the immune system. For someone like me, an infection would be hard to overcome. I would probably be on a ventilator.” | |
| “My husband was diagnosed on March 25. He is home with us. Our older son is a survivor of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. So we are all careful. It has been a rollercoaster.” | |
| Worry about altering medications | “I considered stopping my medication but my doctor said keep taking it for the time being. However, it is not working too well. I have been on it for 3 months and my hands are still stiff. Ordinarily we would have changed to another medication. My doctor decided just to add prednisone for the time being as it might be more risky to start a new medication.” |
| “My doctor was supposed to start methotrexate but did not though it was indicated because of the virus. I do not know what to do, either way is bad.” | |
| “I have a flare now with fatigue, joint pain. My doctor wanted to start steroids, but I asked if we could hold off because of the virus. So I still have symptoms.” | |
| Worry about impact on family | “We take a family trip to Israel every year, but not this year. My brother is there. This is very hard on my parents. I am worried about them.” |
| “I live with my wife and daughters, 17 and 20 years old. I have increased family responsibilities because I cook, my wife works from home, and I have more chores. My daughters should be studying; I am very worried about my daughters.” | |
| “School work is a painful reminder to my son of how it used to be. The social component is worse for kids, they have no other children around. They wonder what are the others doing that I am not. They think it is better to not see what is going on, to build a cocoon.” | |
| Worry about job and finances | “As a therapist I want to help patients but at a decreased extent. I am conflicted, but made the decision that I would not have patient contact. My boss said she cannot accommodate me for much longer. So I am worried for my job.” |
| “I was supposed to start a new job in an afterschool program at a public school a week ago. Now I am unemployed and have to figure out what to do with my life.” | |
| “This has been a financial hit. My retail company has been hit hard. I am worried about my job.” | |
| “I was planning to take a LSAT prep course and exam this summer and apply to law school in the fall. But I am worried if there is no vaccine until November 2020, I will postpone everything.” | |
| “This has had a massive financial effect; we are down to a one income family. I was working from home but just got furloughed. I think I am going to change not just my company, but change my whole line of work. Change to another industry that is essential. My current position is too vulnerable and is not sustainable if we have another event like this.” | |
| “I work from home but have decreased hours, so finances also are decreased. My job is up in the air right now, so far I have survived, I am lucky. But I’m worried what might happen.” |
Categories of stress under the theme of psychological effects due to the COVID-19 pandemic
| Categories | Representative quotations from patients. |
|---|---|
| Stress at work | “I am not working at my usual job in the hospital now. I have been redeployed to other parts of the hospital. Every day I do not know what I will be assigned to do.” |
| “I have added stress, I am paranoid because we are limited in protective equipment; no masks. The order is delayed. A lot of people come in and out of my workplace.” | |
| “I work every day in the medical center, I have face-to-face contact with patients. I was in contact with patients who were COVID positive. It is very stressful. They have not tested me; they should. They should test our entire team too. There is a lot of foot traffic where I work. We all should be wearing masks now; I said that from the beginning but they told us not to.” | |
| Stress at home | “My partner works for New York City transit in the subway and has a disinfecting process when he gets home to protect me. This is very hard and puts stress on our relationship.” |
| “My husband is an engineer, he works outside on site, then comes home and works in the house. I want him to take off his clothes and shower when he gets home. He does not want to do that so it is stressful.” | |
| “It is frustrating for all of us to be at home all the time.” | |
| “We have three teens at home, one with severe autism, so that is an extra stress.” | |
| “At home we have a high schooler and a college junior who came home; he is not happy. It has been stressful to be altogether all the time.” | |
| “I am self-employed, I always work from home, but now my wife and children are always around, this is stressful.” | |
| “The main issue is stress, there is stress at home. My partner is uncomfortable with me coming and going because I work in a hospital.” | |
| Stress from non-routine family responsibilities | “This has been very stressful. I have more family responsibilities to my 4 year old son and my parents. I do social distancing, but I go to Queens every week to shop for my parents. They are ill with diabetes. I wear gloves and a mask.” |
| “My elderly mother lives with me and has very compromised health. Nurses come every other day. They are our only vulnerability. But I trust them and I see the precautions they take. I have a household of chores and increased family responsibilities. I am shepherding schoolwork for my 10 year old now too.” | |
| Stress from unknowns related to SARS-CoV-2 | “I think both my condition and medications affect my risk of getting the virus. But honestly, I am not sure how this works. My immune system is on overdrive - it wants to kill everything, including me.” |
| “The picture is confused. Some medications make you more vulnerable, but some may protect you. I do not think anyone knows.” | |
| “My only question now is who is going to interpret the antibody tests?” | |
| “When this is over I will wonder if I will get the virus later when I am not so cautious.” | |
| Stress from media and forecasts of uncertainty | “There is a lot of stress if you watch the news and social media. I am extremely down and losing hope.” |
| “This is now very stressful. It is also stressful that there is conflicting information; at first they told us not to wear a mask, now we are supposed to wear a mask.” | |
| “Everyone has to do other things, increase hygiene, be more careful in the future, this will change all of us. We do not know what will happen.” |