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What patients want is not what doctors focus on
Parkinson's disease is an excellent example of
the challenges of caring posed by people with neurodegenerative
disorders. It is insidious in onset, inexorably progressive, of unknown
cause, incurable, yet amenable to management with pharmacological and other interventions. With the ageing of the population the prevalence of Parkinson's disease and other such disorders is projected to increase in the years ahead.1 Thus all doctors must be
prepared to provide diagnostic and management strategies for this
growing population of patients. Medical practitioners must understand the expectations of patients and their families and introduce these
perspectives within the framework of scientific understanding and
evidence based practice. Conventional medical education has set a
tradition of practice based on science, basic and clinical, cemented by
a period of postgraduate training in the conventional apprenticeship
mode. This has ensured that practices are generally competent and safe
and grounded in the best available information. But is this approach
consistent with the mission of professionals to build partnerships with
patients by means of strategies for care consistent with the knowledge,
attitudes, and values of a public most of which is educated.
Do most people believe, for example, that the quality of life of
patients with neurodegenerative disorders depends primarily on the
severity of disease and the effectiveness of pharmacological interventions? Without a detailed examination of evidence or a familiarity with the risks associated with treatment, patients may have
an outlook that differs from that of professionals with respect to
health related factors conducive to a better quality of life. Moreover,
protocols for the care of patients are likely to derive more from the
research interests and focus of investigators than the daily burdens of
the people who have the illness.
There is a growing consensus that a lack of congruence exists
between what patients and doctors value in terms of the impact of
disease on quality of life and what should be done about it. In
Parkinson's disease, there is robust evidence in favour of this
divergence of perspective which may represent a potential barrier to
the effectiveness of protocols for care, guidelines for management, and
the most effective and efficient use of health resources.2
When face to face interviews with more than 1000 patients with
Parkinson's disease and carers were carried out in six countries only
17.3% of the variation in perceptions of health related quality of
life could be explained by the severity of disease and the
effectiveness of drug treatment. Such evidence necessarily represents a
wake-up call for those health providers who believe that these factors
are most important for prognosis and require a large share of
professional effort.3
During these interviews, patients were also given the opportunity to
complete specially developed questionnaires and validated instruments
to identify other domains of care of equal or greater importance which
affect the quality of their life. These domains had been identified in
pilot studies by the investigators. The salient responses that
accounted for approximately 60% of health related quality of life were
respondents' mood, satisfaction with the explanation at the time of
diagnosis, and current levels of optimism Apart from effecting a cure, maintenance and improvement of the health
related quality of life are the objectives of any treatment programme
for neurodegenerative disorders. The message for clinicians from this
and other studies is that, contrary to prevailing opinion, a single
minded focus on severity of disease and the effectiveness of drugs will
not adequately address the changes in the health related quality of
life expected from encounters between patients and doctors.
Undergraduate and postgraduate medical education must provide a broader
framework that includes the complexities of factors that are interwoven
in their efforts to improve quality of life.
Communication skills emerge as paramount tools that together with
counselling and behavioural modification contribute substantially to
the results of any treatment programme. A recent study assessing the
effectiveness of specialist nurses for patients with Parkinson's disease in general practice showed that nurse specialists helped to
preserve patients' sense of wellbeing even though health outcomes were
unchanged.6 This study emphasises that a major role of the
nurse specialist is in counselling and educating patients and
carers Essex Neurosciences Unit, Oldchurch Hospital, Essex RM7 0BE Kailua, Maybourne Rise, Mayford, Woking, Surrey GU22 0SH
inclusive of severity of
disease and pharmacological interventions. Indeed the mood
(depression), as measured by the Beck depression inventory, explained
about 40% of variation in the perceived quality of life across this
cohort of patients.
2 4 5
that is, as a facilitator of communication. Merely increasing
the total number of neurological specialists may not be the best or
only solution to these challenging and complex problems. Health
planners need to consider the scope and character of diverse and
comprehensive skills necessary for improving the quality of life for
the growing number of people with neurodegenerative disorders.
Mary G Baker
| 1. |
Menken M, Munsat TL, Toole JF.
The global burden of disease study. Implications for neurology.
Arch Neurol
2000;
57:
418-420 |
| 2. | Findley LJ for Global Parkinson's Disease Steering Committee. Factors impacting on quality of life in Parkinson's disease: results from an international survey. Movement Disord 2002; 17: 60-67. |
| 3. | Janca A. A report on the WHO Working Group on Parkinson's disease. Neuroepidemiology 1999; 18: 236-240[Medline]. |
| 4. | Beck AT, Steer RA, Garvin MG. Psychometric properties of the Beck depression inventory: twenty-five years of evaluation. Clin Psychol Rev 1998; 8: 77-100. |
| 5. | Peto V, Jenkinson C, Fiztpatrick R, Greenhall R. The development and validation of a short measure of functioning and well being for individuals with Parkinson's disease. Qual Life Res 1995; 4: 241-248[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. |
| 6. |
Jarman B, Hurwitz B, Cook A, Bajekal M, Lee A.
Effects of community based nurses specialising in Parkinson's disease on health outcome and costs: a randomised controlled trial.
BMJ
2002;
324:
1072-1075 |
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What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+