THE OUTCOME OF TRADITIONAL OR COMPREHENSIVE OUTPATIENT CARE FOR RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS (RA)

Translated title of the contribution: Traditional or comprehensive outpatient care. Results of an open, non-randomized, 2-year prospective study

H. H. Raspe*, R. Deck, S. Mattussek

*Corresponding author for this work
10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This work presents results of a quasiexperimental prospective cohort study of the medium-term course of chronic rheumatoid arthritis (RA) under two different conditions of care. During 1984-1986 a total of 262 patients was recruited. All were new referrals to a university outpatient department. 121 came from the city of Hannover, FRG, and were assigned to comprehensive team care (cc) provided by two rheumatologists, a nurse, physician's assistant, occupational therapist, phychologist, and social worker; 141 came from outside Hannover and received care from a physician in training for internal medicine/rheumatology and a nurse, supervised by a senior registrar (TC). The patients in the first group were significantly older (57 vs 51 years), had more active disease (ESR 44 vs 31 mm/h), were more disabled (functional capacity 69 vs 78%), more often lived alone (27 vs 10%) and were more depressed compared with patients in the second group. There were no significant differences in gender (80% female), number of Rome criteria (5.2), and disease duration (6 years) between the two groups. 179 patients were followed for 2 years. There was no demonstrable difference between those who dropped out and those who continued in the study. Patients from both groups showed significant and clinically important improvements in ESR and number of swollen joints, whereas functional capacity and pain intensity did not change. Depression and patients' global self-rating improved only in the CC-group. Analyses adjusting for differences between the two groups were unable to show a different efficacy for either form of care. If there should be a higher efficacy of CC, then the advantage would be most likely minor, but at considerably higher cost. After pooling data from both groups, initial values of the outcome-variables resulted as the most important prognostic factors. Education showed a significant but weak influence: patients with a low level of formal education experienced more intense pain and gave a worse assessment of their overall condition.

Translated title of the contributionTraditional or comprehensive outpatient care. Results of an open, non-randomized, 2-year prospective study
Original languageGerman
JournalZeitschrift fur Rheumatologie
Volume51
Issue numberSUPPL. 1
Pages (from-to)61-66
Number of pages6
ISSN0340-1855
Publication statusPublished - 1992

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