Abstract

BackgroundSystemic sclerosis (SSc) is a chronic connective-tissue disease responsible for reduced life expectancy, disability and a decreased quality of life. In order to optimize patients-physicians relationship and care strategy we aimed to survey views of patients on SSc and its management to reveal potential hurdles and improve health care strategies.MethodsA qualitative study combined semi-structured interviews, focus groups, and a direct observation of an information session was performed between November 2008 and January 2009.ResultsTwenty-five patients with SSc were included. They encounter difficulties to have a clear representation of their disease. Physical, psychological, and social repercussions of SSc may lead to a psychological distress and different coping strategies, which widely differ among interviewed patients. Patients’ views on their therapeutic journey and the management of their disease highlighted strong expectations about patient-physician relationship. These expectations were numerous, complex and sometimes ambivalent. Patients expected physicians to be human and attentive but also involved in research in the field and to provide psychological and affective support to help them to accept the uncertainty of disease evolution and lack of curative treatment. They also expected more individualized management, improvements in diagnosis and follow-up organization, more efforts in education and information, comprehensive behaviors and support from working colleagues and relatives, and increased funding from the health care system.ConclusionsOur results suggest that SSc management could be optimized, particularly with more attention to the patient–practitioner relationship. Patient profiles should be more precisely defined in terms of coping strategies and treatment preferences to propose more individualized options.

Highlights

  • Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a chronic connective-tissue disease responsible for reduced life expectancy, disability and a decreased quality of life

  • Patients’ representation of SSc Patients’ representations of SSc were not univocal but rather polymorphic and had changed over time. This first finding highlighted a lack of understanding of the disease but it showed that patients did not have certain knowledge of the disease

  • In conclusion, our work underlines the views that patients have about SSc, which may limit the management of SSc more than the material constraints or the social dynamics of the patient–care provider relationship

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Summary

Introduction

Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a chronic connective-tissue disease responsible for reduced life expectancy, disability and a decreased quality of life. In order to optimize patients-physicians relationship and care strategy we aimed to survey views of patients on SSc and its management to reveal potential hurdles and improve health care strategies. Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a connective-tissue disease characterized by skin and visceral excessive collagen deposition and by vascular hyper-reactivity and obliterative microvascular phenomena [1]. SSc management is predicated on identifying organ-specific disease manifestations and patients and their physicians differ in their assessment of important health and symptom status in Mouthon et al BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders (2017) 18:230 several chronic diseases, the views of patients concerning SSc and its management have seldom been studied [12,13,14,15]. Our research questions were: (i) What are patients’ views of the disease, (ii) and of QoL in SSc? (iii) What are their evaluation and expectations regarding the care process?

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