Abstract
Background
Fibromyalgia is a common reason for referral to a rheumatologist and is a centralised pain state with symptoms beginning in adolescence/early adulthood and manifests as pain throughout the body, fatigue and cognitive dysfunction. Whilst there is considerable evidence on effective treatments, diagnosis and management are complex. There is almost no evidence on how to organise health services to deliver recommended therapies. The aim of the current study was to understand patient preferences for different features of healthcare services for fibromyalgia.
Methodology
We use the Discrete Choice Experiment Method (DCE), a choice-based survey that quantifies preferences for attributes of goods, services or policy interventions, to elicit preferences in relation to alternative models of care for people with fibromyalgia. In this study, attributes describe different models of care for fibromyalgia. We based attributes and levels on earlier phases of the PACFiND project and a literature review on fibromyalgia models of care. The final analysis sample consisted of 518 respondents who completed the survey in full.
Results
The final analysis sample consisted of 518 respondents ((patients living in the UK, over 18 years old, with a diagnosis of fibromyalgia), who completed the survey in full. The model of care most preferred is one characterised by earlier diagnosis and ongoing management by a Rheumatologist, via Face-to-face or Phone/video call appointments, with a stronger preference for the latter mode of support. The most preferred treatment was Medication, followed by Physical Therapy, with the least preferred being Talking Therapy. Relative to a Waiting Time for treatment of 6 months, respondents would prefer a lower Waiting Time of 3 months and dislike waiting 12 months for treatment. Respondents showed willingness to receive Ongoing Help and Advice by a Nurse Practitioner or a GP, instead of a Specialist Rheumatologist, provided they were compensated by other changes in the model of care.
Conclusion
This study has found that, although respondents express a preference for specialist care, provided by a Rheumatologist, they may be willing to trade-off this preference against other features within a model of care. This willingness to accept a different skill-mix (e.g., appointments with a GP or a Nurse Practitioner) has important implications for practice and policy, as this is a more feasible option in settings where the availability of specialist care is highly constrained.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference31 articles.
1. Fibromyalgia in rheumatology practice: a survey of Canadian rheumatologists;K. P. White;The Journal of Rheumatology,1995
2. The prevalence of fibromyalgia in the general population: a comparison of the American College of Rheumatology 1990, 2010, and modified 2010 classification criteria.;G. T. Jones;Arthritis & Rheumatology,2015
3. Prevalence of fibromyalgia syndrome in Saudi Arabia: a systematic review and meta-analysis;Y. Bawazir;BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders,2023
4. Disability and quality of life in patients with fibromyalgia;J. A. Verbunt;Health and Quality of Life Outcomes,2008
5. Suicidal behavior in fibromyalgia patients: rates and determinants of suicide ideation, risk, suicide, and suicidal attempts—a systematic review of the literature and Meta-analysis of over 390,000 fibromyalgia patients;M. Adawi;Frontiers in psychiatry,2021