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Immediate effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on patient health, health-care use, and behaviours: results from an international survey of people with rheumatic diseases

Authors :
Jonathan S Hausmann
Kevin Kennedy
Julia F Simard
Jean W Liew
Jeffrey A Sparks
Tarin T Moni
Carly Harrison
Maggie J Larché
Mitchell Levine
Sebastian E Sattui
Teresa Semalulu
Gary Foster
Salman Surangiwala
Lehana Thabane
Richard P Beesley
Karen L Durrant
Elsa F Mateus
Serena Mingolla
Michal Nudel
Candace A Palmerlee
Dawn P Richards
David F L Liew
Catherine L Hill
Suleman Bhana
Wendy Costello
Rebecca Grainger
Pedro M Machado
Philip C Robinson
Paul Sufka
Zachary S Wallace
Jinoos Yazdany
Emily Sirotich
Philip C. Robinson
Jean W. Liew
Paul H. Sufka
Namrata Singh
Richard A. Howard
Alfred H.J. Kim
Tiffany Westrich-Robertson
Edmund Tsui
Ali Duarte-Garcia
Jeffrey A. Sparks
Herman Tam
Arundathi Jayatilleke
Maximilian F. Konig
Elizabeth R. Graef
Michael S. Putman
Reema H. Syed
Peter Korsten
Elsa Mateus
Sebastian E. Sattui
Zachary S. Wallace
Upton A. Laura
Kilian Adam
Yu Pei Eugenia Chock
Douglas W. White
Geraldine T. Zamora
Lisa S. Traboco
Aarat M. Patel
Manuel F. Ugarte-Gil
Milena A. Gianfrancesco
Isabelle Amigues
Catalina Sanchez-Alvarez
Laura Trupin
Lindsay R. Jacobsohn
Richard P. Beesley
Bimba F. Hoyer
Pedro M. Machado
Kavita Makan
Laure Gossec
Chaudhary Priyank
Jan Leipe
Beth Wallace
Sheila T. Angeles-Han
Ibrahim A. Almaghlouth
Wysham D. Katherine
Anthony S. Padula
Francis Berenbaum
Erin M. Treemarcki
Rashmi Sinha
Laura B. Lewandowski
Kate Webb
Kristen J. Young
Inita Bulina
Sebastian Herrera Uribe
Tamar B. Rubinstein
Marc W. Nolan
Elizabeth Y. Ang
Swamy R. Venuturupalli
Jonathan S. Hausmann
Maureen Dubreuil
Cecilia N. Pisoni
Micaela A. Cosatti
Jose Campos
Julia F. Simard
Richard Conway
Tiffany M. Peterson
Carly O. Harrison
Christele Felix
Dawn P. Richards
Laurie Proulx
Akpabio A. Akpabio
Angus B. Worthing
Lynn R. Laidlaw
Pankti Reid
Candace A. Palmerlee
Maria I. Danila
Lotfi-Emran Sahar
Ngo Q. Linh
Arnav Agarwal
Paul Studenic
David F.L. Liew
Maggie J. Larche
Serena A.M. Mingolla
Erick A. Zamora
Saskya S. Angevare
Rashmi R. Sinha
Karen L.W. Durrant
Andrea Peirce
Emily C. Somers
Laura C. Cappelli
Brittany A. Frankel
Bharat Kumar
Sonia D. Silinsky Krupnikova
Jorge A. Rosario Vega
Jourdan Frankovich
Ruth Fernandez-Ruiz
Marcela Posada Velásquez
Su-Ann Yeoh
Maria Marino
Chrisiaan Scott
Cecilia Rodríguez
Ana I. Martín Mancheño
Philip Seo
Rocío V. Gamboa-Cárdenas
Victor R. Pimentel-Quiroz
Cristina Reátegui-Sokolova
Mari Kihara
Chung M.A. Lin
Dheera Kattula
Girgis Laila
Loreto Carmona
John Wallace
Monique C. Gore-massy
Laura-Ann Tomasella
Moré A. Kodek
Source :
The Lancet. Rheumatology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier Ltd., 2021.

Abstract

Background: The impact and consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic on people with rheumatic disease are unclear. We developed the COVID-19 Global Rheumatology Alliance Patient Experience Survey to assess the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on people with rheumatic disease worldwide. Methods: Survey questions were developed by key stakeholder groups and disseminated worldwide through social media, websites, and patient support organisations. Questions included demographics, rheumatic disease diagnosis, COVID-19 diagnosis, adoption of protective behaviours to mitigate COVID-19 exposure, medication access and changes, health-care access and communication with rheumatologists, and changes in employment or schooling. Adults age 18 years and older with inflammatory or autoimmune rheumatic diseases were eligible for inclusion. We included participants with and without a COVID-19 diagnosis. We excluded participants reporting only non-inflammatory rheumatic diseases such as fibromyalgia or osteoarthritis. Findings: 12 117 responses to the survey were received between April 3 and May 8, 2020, and of these, 10 407 respondents had included appropriate age data. We included complete responses from 9300 adults with rheumatic disease (mean age 46·1 years; 8375 [90·1%] women, 893 [9·6%] men, and 32 [0·3%] participants who identified as non-binary). 6273 (67·5%) of respondents identified as White, 1565 (16·8%) as Latin American, 198 (2·1%) as Black, 190 (2·0%) as Asian, and 42 (0·5%) as Native American or Aboriginal or First Nation. The most common rheumatic disease diagnoses included rheumatoid arthritis (3636 [39·1%] of 9300), systemic lupus erythematosus (2882 [31·0%]), and Sjogren's syndrome (1290 [13·9%]). Most respondents (6921 [82·0%] of 8441) continued their antirheumatic medications as prescribed. Almost all (9266 [99·7%] of 9297) respondents adopted protective behaviours to limit SARS-CoV-2 exposure. A change in employment status occurred in 2524 (27·1%) of 9300) of respondents, with a 13·6% decrease in the number in full-time employment (from 4066 to 3514). Interpretation: People with rheumatic disease maintained therapy and followed public health advice to mitigate the risks of COVID-19. Substantial employment status changes occurred, with potential implications for health-care access, medication affordability, mental health, and rheumatic disease activity. Funding: American College of Rheumatology.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26659913
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet. Rheumatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....448fed1950a8b73e8aa3446bf6c5eeb4