Dr Miles Thompson

Clinical Psychologist and Associate Professor in Psychology


Health professionals’ perspectives on psychological distress and meeting patients’ support needs in rheumatology care settings: A qualitative study

Type:Article
Year:2023
Title:Health professionals’ perspectives on psychological distress and meeting patients’ support needs in rheumatology care settings: A qualitative study
Author(s):Christine Silverthorne, Jo Daniels, Miles Thompson, Joanna C. Robson, Mwidimi Ndosi, Caroline Swales, Kate Wilkins, Emma Dures
Outlet:Musculoskeletal Care
Abstract Summary:Background
Patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases (IRDs) face challenges including pain, fatigue and disease flares. Evidence suggests their levels of anxiety and depression are higher compared to the general population. Rheumatology teams report psychologically distressed patients have additional support needs and require more clinical time. Little is currently known about models of support and their integration into care pathways.

Aim
To understand rheumatology health professionals’ perspectives on patients’ psychological distress and ways to meet support needs.

Methods
The study used a qualitative design, with data collected in telephone semi-structured interviews. Inductive thematic analysis was used to analyse the data.

Results
Fifteen interviews were conducted. Two main themes with sub-themes represent the data: Theme 1: ‘No one shoe fits all’—the many manifestations of distress in patients (sub-themes: recognising distress, dealing with distress, dealing with life events alongside an IRD) and Theme 2: ‘If rheumatology could be interwoven with psychological principles’—the need to attend to the psychological impact of IRDs, alongside the physical impact (sub-themes: priority given to physical health, working together to help patients in distress, how should patient distress be measured?, the need for extra time and resources).

Conclusion
Distress can be obvious or hidden, cause issues for patients and health professionals and lead to poor engagement with care provision. Health professionals described the powerful link between physical and mental distress. This study suggests psychological support provision should be embedded within the rheumatology team and that patients’ emotional wellbeing should be given equal priority to their physical wellbeing.
Keyword(s):Health professionals, inflammatory rheumatic diseases, psychological distress, qualitative, support needs
Reference:Silverthorne, C., Daniels, J., Thompson, M., Robson, J. C., Ndosi, M., Swales, C.,… Dures, E. (2023). Health professionals’ perspectives on psychological distress and meeting patients’ support needs in rheumatology care settings: A qualitative study. Musculoskeletal Care, 21, 2, 537-544.
https://doi.org/10.1002/msc.1730
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