Abstract
Objectives: Following the recent National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence guidance on the management of RA, we were interested to see if we could negotiate targets for treatment with patients in routine clinics, how they would express this and whether staying at work would be a target. Methods: One hundred RA patients were recruited. They were consecutive within clinics, but not all clinics were used. They were asked their understanding of the DAS score and a target for treatment negotiated. Any impact of the RA on their paid employment was then explored. Results: Four participants were unable to specify a target for their RA. Negotiated targets were expressed as restricted activities and either as maintaining an activity (70) if the disease was stable, or regaining an activity (26) if the treatment was being increased. Targets were walking a distance for 50% of patients; leisure activities for 18%; domestic activities for 17%; work for 14% and personal care for 25%. For the 21 participants currently working, maintaining work was the target for 12, with 1 wishing to regain lost hours. No patient currently not working expressed returning to work as a target. There were some differences in targets between men and women. Conclusions: Patients are able to negotiate a target for their treatment, expressed as maintaining or regaining a physical activity. Work ceases to be a target once it is lost. Therefore, preventing loss of occupation is likely to be more effective than trying to regain it. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Rheumatology. All rights reserved.
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Robinson, S. M., & Walker, D. J. (2012). Negotiating targets with patients: Choice of target in relation to occupational state. Rheumatology, 51(2), 293–296. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/ker237
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