The aim of this study is to evaluate the results of psychosocial treatment in patients with newly diagnosed rheumatoid arthritis and/or diabetes.
Research and clinical experience show that adaptation to chronic disease is affected by individuals' psychological and social situations and subjective experiences of threat to identity, autonomy, and life. It is important to identify persons whose psychosocial situation and reaction to the diagnosis is such that they may not be able to adjust to the illness or take adequate responsibility for adherence to treatment. The purpose of this study is to identify such at-risk persons, and with the help of psychosocial treatment, strengthen their resistance resources and help them work through emotional and social problems that hinder adequate adaptation and adherence to treatment. Beginning in 2001, 200 consecutive patients between 18 and 65 years who are newly diagnosed with either rheumatoid arthritis (n = 100) or diabetes (n = 100) at the Karolinska Hospital, Solna, Sweden, will be included in the study. Each person will be interviewed by a medical social worker about their psychosocial situation and possible problems. Every other patient with psychosocial problems will be offered intensive, personalized psychosocial treatment. The rest of the patients with problems will be given minimal required measures. The psychosocial well-being and medical situation of all patients (intensive treatment group, minimal treatment group, and the group without need of psychosocial measures) will be followed for 2 years and evaluated at the conclusion of that time.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
200
Each person was given psychosocial treatment and support by a medical social worker a maximum of one time each week for a period of up to 2 years after inclusion. Treatment was designed by a medical social work on the basis of the individual's personal needs.
Minimal social measures were provided to individuals in this arm. No treatment that included conversational therapy was given.
Center for Family and Community Medicine
Huddinge, Sweden
Karolinska University Hospital Solna
Stockholm, Sweden
Psychosocial well-being as measured by interview with a medical social worker, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, General Coping Questionnaire, Social Situation Questionnaire, and self-reported satisfaction with psychosocial treatment
Time frame: 2 years after inclusion
Medical parameters that show whether the patient has reached treatment goals for his or her disease; for example, glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) for diabetes and the Disease Activity Score (DAS) for rheumatoid arthritis
Time frame: 2 years after inclusion
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