Is it me? The impact of patient–physician interactions on lupus patients’ psychological well-being, cognition and health-care-seeking behaviour

Author:

Sloan Melanie1,Naughton Felix2,Harwood Rupert3,Lever Elliott4,D’Cruz David5,Sutton Stephen1,Walia Chanpreet6,Howard Paul6,Gordon Caroline7

Affiliation:

1. Behavioural Science Group, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge

2. Behavioural and Implementation Science Group, School of Health Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich

3. Patient and Public Involvement in Lupus Research Group, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge

4. Department of Rheumatology, University College London, London

5. The Louise Coote Lupus Unit, Guys’ Hospital, London

6. LUPUS UK, St James’ House, Romford

7. Rheumatology Research Group, Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, College of Medical and Dental Science, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

Abstract

Abstract Objective The aim was to explore the impact of patient–physician interactions, pre- and post-diagnosis, on lupus and UCTD patients’ psychological well-being, cognition and health-care-seeking behaviour. Methods Participants were purposively sampled from the 233 responses to a survey on patient experiences of medical support. Twenty-one semi-structured interviews were conducted and themes generated using thematic analysis. Results The study identified six principal themes: (i) the impact of the diagnostic journey; (ii) the influence of key physician(s) on patient trust and security, with most participants reporting at least one positive medical relationship; (iii) disparities in patient–physician priorities, with patients desiring more support with quality-of-life concerns; (iv) persisting insecurity and distrust, which was prevalent and largely influenced by previous and anticipated disproportionate (often perceived as dismissive) physician responses to symptoms and experiences of widespread inadequate physician knowledge of systemic autoimmune diseases; (v) changes to health-care-seeking behaviours, such as curtailing help-seeking or under-reporting symptoms; and (vi) empowerment, including shared medical decision-making and knowledge acquisition, which can mitigate insecurity and improve care. Conclusion Negative medical interactions pre- and post-diagnosis can cause a loss of self-confidence and a loss of confidence and trust in the medical profession. This insecurity can persist even in subsequent positive medical relationships and should be addressed. Key physicians implementing empowering and security-inducing strategies, including being available in times of health crises and validating patient-reported symptoms, might lead to more trusting medical relationships and positive health-care-seeking behaviour.

Funder

LUPUS

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rheumatology

Reference47 articles.

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