4 research outputs found

    A tailored intervention for illness acceptance improves adherence and quality of life in adults with haemophilia using prophylaxis

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    Introduction: Adherence to prophylactic treatment (prophylaxis) in persons with haemophilia is challenging and has been reported at only ±50%. Acceptance problems are one of the main reasons for non-adherence in haemophilia. An evidence-based intervention was developed based on an acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) approach. Aim: To evaluate a tailored intervention focused on illness acceptance in adults with haemophilia who were prescribed prophylaxis. Methods: A pre-post study was executed in adults with haemophilia who were prescribed prophylaxis. A series of 8 2-hour group trainings were held, including 3-8 participants/series. Adherence (VERITAS-Pro, optimum 0), health-related quality of life (HRQoL, SF-36, optimum 100) and illness perception (BIPQ, optimum 0) were measured at start, after six months and 12 months and analysed using Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Results: Twenty-four patients (median age 47 years, range 27-74) were included. After 12 months, adherence improved in 68% of patients, quality of life in 48% and illness perception in 31%. Adherence (total score) improved from 35 to 25 (P<0.01). HRQoL showed clinically relevant improvement in domains of social-functioning (P = 0.04), role-emotional, physical-functioning, role-physical and bodily pain. Illness perception improved statistically significant on domains of affect (P = 0.01), concern (P = 0.01) and understanding (P = 0.04). Patients evaluated the training useful, an eye-opener, a personal enrichment and insightful. Conclusion: The tailored group intervention resulted in significant improvement of adherence, quality of life and illness perception. Based on our current experience, we have implemented it in clinical practice and collaborate with the patient association to make it available for all Dutch people with haemophilia

    The experiences and attitudes of hemophilia carriers around pregnancy: A qualitative systematic review

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    Background: Hemophilia carriers (HCs) face specific psychosocial challenges related to pregnancy, caused by their inherited bleeding disorder. Optimal support from healthcare providers can only be realized by exploring medical and psychological healthcare requirements. Objective: To review all published evidence on the experiences and attitudes of HCs regarding reproductive decision-making, prenatal diagnosis, pregnancy, childbirth, and puerperium to provide an accessible overview of this information for health care providers. Study selection: Cochrane library, PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and PsycINFO were searched for original qualitative data. Two authors performed study selection, risk-of-bias assessment, data extraction, and data analysis through meta-summary. The extracted themes were discussed within the research team. Findings: Fifteen studies with an overall moderate quality were included. The following findings were identified: (a) Quality of life of family members with hemophilia influences reproductive decision-making; (b) Genetic counselling is generally considered useful; (c) The development of a specialized carrier clinic is considered valuable; (d) HCs describe prenatal diagnosis as beneficial yet psychosocially challenging; and (e) noninvasive prenatal diagnosis and preimplantation genetic diagnosis are predominantly considered beneficial. These findings are limited by the overall moderate quality of included studies and the possibly partly outdated results in the current era of hemophilia treatment. Conclusions: Available qualitative literature on HCs around pregnancy focuses on genetic counselling and prenatal diagnosis. Future studies are needed on the experiences and needs of HCs through pregnancy and puerperium as well as in light of emerging hemophilia diagnosis and treatment options
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