| Literature DB >> 35237741 |
Yeliz Prior1,2, Carol Bartley3, Jo Adams4, Jill Firth5, June Culley6, Terence W O'Neill7,8, Alison Hammond1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Arthritis gloves are frequently prescribed to people with undifferentiated inflammatory arthritis (UIA) or RA to help reduce hand pain and improve function. Nested within a randomized controlled trial testing the effectiveness of arthritis gloves (Isotoner gloves vs loose-fitting placebo gloves) in people with RA and UIA, this qualitative study aimed to explore participants' views on the impact of wearing arthritis gloves on their hand pain and function.Entities:
Keywords: RA; arthritis gloves; compression gloves; functional limitations; hand pain; hand problems; inflammatory arthritis; occupational therapy; orthoses
Year: 2022 PMID: 35237741 PMCID: PMC8883590 DOI: 10.1093/rap/rkac007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rheumatol Adv Pract ISSN: 2514-1775
Arthritis gloves (intervention and control)
(A) Intervention (Isotoner) arthritis glove. (B) Placebo glove (loose-fitting Jobskin classic oedema glove: control group).
Core interview questions
| Semi-structured interview schedule |
|---|
| Opening question: having worn the arthritis gloves for up to 12 weeks, could you tell me about any negative or positive effects these have had on your hand pain and hand problems? |
| Prompts:
How did you find wearing them? How was it to put them on and off your hands? Were there any particular activities you found they helped with? Were there any particular activities you found they did not help with? Was there anything about the gloves or their effects which you think helped/hindered your hand pain and hand problems? Have you used them at work (if employed)? Did you have any problems wearing the gloves? What did you think of the gloves’ appearance? What did you think of the quality of the gloves you were given? How did you find cleaning them? Would you consider buying them in the future? Would you change anything about them to make it better for your use? |
Demographic and clinical data
| Number | Sex | Age (years) | Diagnosis | TSD (months) | Medication regimen |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | 57 | RA | 11 | 1 DMARD | INT |
| 2 | M | 79 | UIA | 4 | ≥2 DMARDs | INT |
| 3 | M | 75 | RA | 11 | 1 DMARD | INT |
| 4 | F | 69 | RA | 3 | 1 DMARD + opioids (PRN) | CNT |
| 5 | F | 67 | RA | 240 | 1 DMARD + opioids (PRN) | INT |
| 6 | M | 49 | RA | 84 | 1 DMARD | INT |
| 7 | F | 54 | RA | 60 | 1 DMARD | CNT |
| 8 | F | 58 | RA | 12 | NSAIDs + paracetamol | INT |
| 9 | F | 73 | RA | 264 | Biologics + paracetamol | INT |
| 10 | M | 71 | RA | 48 | 1 DMARD | INT |
| 11 | F | 61 | RA | 252 | ≥2 DMARDs + NSAIDs | CNT |
| 12 | F | 59 | RA | 44 | Biologics | INT |
| 13 | F | 60 | RA | 120 | ≥2 DMARDs | CNT |
| 14 | F | 52 | RA | 216 | Biologics | CNT |
| 15 | F | 50 | UIA | 228 | ≥2 DMARDs | CNT |
| 16 | F | 30 | RA | 24 | ≥2 DMARDs | CNT |
| 17 | M | 63 | RA | 216 | Biologics + NSAIDs | INT |
| 18 | M | 70 | RA | 12 | NSAIDs | CNT |
| 19 | F | 74 | RA | 10 | ≥2 DMARDs + amitriptyline | CNT |
Amitriptyline: a tricyclic antidepressant used for pain management.
CNT: control/placebo glove; F: female; INT: intervention glove; M: male; PRN: When required; TG: treatment group; TSD: time since diagnosis (at baseline); UIA: undifferentiated inflammatory arthritis.
Labels of main and sub-themes
| Main theme | Sub-themes |
|---|---|
| 1. Mechanisms determining glove use | Thermal qualities |
| Glove use in daily activities | |
| Glove use during sleep | |
| 2. Ambivalence about the benefit of the gloves | Are they a help or hindrance? |
| Aesthetic appeal | |
| Durability and maintenance of gloves |
Data excerpts evidencing theme 1 and sub-themes
| Theme 1: mechanisms determining glove use: ‘As soon as your joints get a bit warmer, the pain actually eases’ |
|---|
| (i) Thermal qualities |
| I think it was the support or the heat; I don’t know. And as I say, I tried to analyse it and I just couldn’t because really when you look at them you think it shouldn’t help you, but they do’. (F, 59 years old, CNT) |
| I found them very pleasant, it was quite elastic, warm, and I think warmth makes a big difference with the rheumatics in the hands. And in its own way comforting, but unfortunately it doesn’t seem to have helped me a lot. (M, 79 years old, INT) |
| They were fab. They actually made my joints warm and … as soon as your joints get a bit warmer, the pain actually eases. (M, 63 years old, CNT) |
| The only thing that I do like about them was they kept your hands warm in the cold. (F, 61 years old, CNT) |
| I didn’t use them when I went to bed at night … I found them very warm. (F, 69 years old, INT) |
| Well, especially in this weather, this cold weather … warm … they keep my wrists warm and that does help ’cause when it is colder they do go sore then, but they do help when it’s cold weather. (M, 75 years old, INT) |
| (ii) Glove use in daily activities |
| It helped a great deal with support, when I was doing housework … carrying shopping bags. It helped then. (M, 71 years old, INT) |
| …like, for instance, if I was to change a plug … or plug a device in, like headphones or something, I could actually do it quite simply because my fingers were … my hands weren’t cold … plug it into the device or whatever with the dexterity. (M, 63 years old, CNT) |
| they are a comfort … especially when I’m reading and yes, it’s great. (F, 73 years old, INT) |
| I don’t put them on when I do big jobs or anything like that … you know, vacuuming up and things like that … general household work. I don’t put them on when I’m washing up ’cause they’d get wet of course. (M, 75 years old, INT) |
| …because of course gloves, you can’t wear it if I’m driving because they’re a bit slippery and it’s not good for driving. (F, 30 years old, INT) |
| I could wear them all day, but when I try and do some cleaning or whatever, I have to take them off and then I’m like I can’t get these wet. (M, 70 years old, CNT) |
| …so I didn’t wear it if I was doing anything, like washing dishes or things like that, hoovering, I’d take them off. (F, 61 years old, CNT) |
| Well yes, anything where I had to grip things particularly, like the steering wheel for driving, or … I was very careful lifting crockery and such because I thought they were a little bit slippery. (F, 67 years old, CNT) |
| Social activities, outside, no. But as I say, it was either lifting a glass of beer or dealing cards and not helpful in either case. (M, 79 years old, INT) |
| (iii) Glove use during sleep |
| I mostly wear it at night because … my mornings are worse. So, if I wear it at night this helps me in the morning. You know, my wrist, it won’t get stuck. (F, 30 years old, INT) |
| I find when I wake up in the morning, they seem a lot easier, still stiff and still a bit swollen, but they’re better since I’ve been wearing the gloves. (M, 70 years old, CNT) |
| …at night-time I put them on when I go to bed. Not every night, it depends how my wrists feel, but they’re really comfortable … you don’t know you’ve got them on. (M, 79 years old, INT) |
| It was just, I think overnight with the amount of time that I was wearing them, clearly it didn’t agree with my system. (F, 58 years old, INT) |
CNT: control group; F: female; INT: intervention group; M: male.
Data excerpts evidencing theme 2 and sub-themes
| Theme 2: ambivalence about the benefit of the gloves: ‘I suppose a normal pair of gloves would do the same sort of thing?’ |
|---|
| (i) Are they a help or hindrance? |
| I was, like I say, taking them off and on, like … the instructions say keep on taking them off and then putting them on. And then I’d think, oh, forget this, I can’t be bothered taking them on and off, so I’d leave them off. (M, 70 years old, CNT) |
| I can’t say that I found them particularly helpful, as I say, apart from the comfort factor of having the warmth on my hands … but I think that’s probably the only benefit, I think. (F, 67 years old, CNT) |
| You get a slight warming in the hands, which is obviously beneficial. Apart from that, I can’t think of anything really. (M, 57 years old, INT) |
| …my hands sort of just go, oh, I’m pleased they are on. It seems to give them a little bit of a hand, if that makes sense. (M, 49 years old, CNT) |
| Yes, having the glove on seemed to keep my hands quite … so it helped my hands to move easier, particularly in the colder weather. (F, 67 years old, CNT) |
| I don’t like them. I felt it affected my hands more in them. I felt my hand was sore quite a lot. (F, 61 years old, CNT) |
| In the early days it was very helpful, but as time went by my pain in my hands got less. Whether that was the gloves, the exercise or the medication I’m not sure. (M, 79 years old, INT) |
| I went into it with a positive attitude, hoping that this would be something that would perhaps be an alternative to medication or at least, you know, the possibility that I would be able to take less medication, but unfortunately it didn’t work for me. (F, 58 years old, INT) |
| (ii) Aesthetic appeal |
| I think they are really nice, and they are like, I can hide my hands with them, that’s what I like. (F, 73 years old, INT) |
| …They felt alright. They looked alright. I don’t think anybody … nobody has sort of made any snide comments about them at all. (M, 70 years old, CNT) |
| I thought they actually looked, you know, quite attractive … lot of women, more so possible than men, feel that they want to hide their hands a little bit, and the fact that they were flesh coloured, I think they looked quite modern. And unobtrusive as well. (F, 58 years old, INT) |
| I think, because I’m fairly vain, and I just didn’t want to wear that colour, people do tend to, especially if you’re in the supermarket or doing anything, your hands are being used all the time, aren’t they, and they just sort of look at you as if to say, well, what are you hiding under there, you know, is it something I could catch? (F, 59 years old, CNT) |
| I mean, people will notice, but I’m sure they noticed my hands a lot more because they are quite ugly. (F, 73 years old, INT) |
| The fact that you’re conscious that, you know, you’ve got them on and if you’re, say, going shopping with them on or something like that, if people, you know, see them and they’re looking at you … I think I’d have had to take them off if I was going out. (F, 74 years old, CNT) |
| (iii) Future use of gloves |
| …it’s not a thing I’d go out and think, oh right, I’d better go to town and get a pair of them. No. Or go and buy them in the hospital or whatever, no. I can’t see any point in that … I suppose a normal pair of gloves would do the same sort of thing. (M, 70 years old, CNT) |
| I must admit I did find that the stitching around the cuffs of the wrist left a little bit to be desired. The stitching on mine has come undone. (M, 71 years old, INT) |
| Well in fact, if I had that same … the right conditions, and the hospital offered me to try them again, I’d probably give them a go, but as it is now I wouldn’t go out and buy any. (F, 50 years old, CNT) |
CNT: control group; F: female; INT: intervention group; M: male.