Abstract
IntroductionCommon colds are the most frequently encountered disease worldwide and the most frequent reason for self-care. According to the cross-sectional European Common Colds study (COCO), patients use as many as 12 items on average for self-care. Little is known about the influence of discomfort and knowledge on self-care for common colds.Main objectiveTo understand the influence of patients’ discomfort during a cold and their knowledge about the self-limited disease course on the use of self-care measures.Materials and methodsThis COCO analysis included 2,204 patients from 22 European primary care sites in 12 countries. Each site surveyed 120 consecutive adults with a 27-item questionnaire asking about patients’ self-care, subjective discomfort during a cold (discomfort: yes/no), and knowledge about the self-limited course (yes/no). Country-specific medians of the number of self-care items served as a cut-off to define high and low self-care use. Four groups were stratified based on discomfort (yes/no) and knowledge (yes/no).ResultsParticipants’ mean age was 46.5 years, 61.7% were female; 36.3% lacked knowledge; 70.6% reported discomfort. The group has discomfort/no knowledge exhibited the highest mean item use (13.3), followed by has discomfort/has knowledge (11.9), no discomfort/no knowledge (11.1), and no discomfort/has knowledge (8.8). High use was associated with discomfort (OR 1.8; CI 1.5–2.2), female gender (OR 1.7; 1.4–2.0), chronic pain/arthritis (OR 1.6; 1.2–2.1), more years of education (OR 1.3; 1.1–1.6), age <48 years (OR 1.3; 1.0–1.5), and lack of knowledge (OR 1.2; 1.0–1.4).DiscussionCounseling on common colds should address patients’ discomfort and soothing measures in addition to providing information on the natural disease course.
Highlights
Common colds are the most frequently encountered disease worldwide and the most frequent reason for self-care
Our findings suggest that subjective discomfort is a key factor driving self-care behavior for common colds and needs to be adequately addressed in physician-patient consultations alongside providing information on the natural disease course
Our study suggests that the mere knowledge that common colds are self-limited is of limited value for patients who experience a high level of discomfort
Summary
Common colds are the most frequently encountered disease worldwide and the most frequent reason for self-care. According to the cross-sectional European Common Colds study (COCO), patients use as many as 12 items on average for self-care. Little is known about the influence of discomfort and knowledge on self-care for common colds. To understand the influence of patients’ discomfort during a cold and their knowledge about the self-limited disease course on the use of self-care measures
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