scholarly journals PTH-096 Factors affecting patient decision-making in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) dysplasia management: a mixed methods study

Author(s):  
Misha Kabir ◽  
Siwan Thomas-Gibson ◽  
Ailsa Hart ◽  
Ana Wilson
2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Flavio M Habal ◽  
Varun Kapila

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) often affects women during their child-bearing years. Management of a pregnant IBD patient, or a patient contemplating pregnancy, poses unique challenges and can be quite daunting. Knowledge of the basic interplay among disease, normal host physiology and pregnancy is vital to managing these patients. One of the most important advances in the management of IBD over the past decade has been the finding that normal pregnancy outcomes can be achieved when a woman enters the pregnancy in remission. New insights into the safety of a wider spectrum of drugs in these patients has allowed for increased success in IBD management. The evidence supporting medical interventions including biological therapy such as antibodies to tumour necrosis factor agents is reviewed. Once the treating physician understands this complex relationship, management of the pregnant IBD patient can often become a rewarding experience.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Strong ◽  
Tia Callaghan ◽  
Erin Beal ◽  
Christine Moffatt ◽  
Nyantara Wickramasekera ◽  
...  

BMJ Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. e056413
Author(s):  
Violeta Razanskaite ◽  
Constantinos Kallis ◽  
Bridget Young ◽  
Paula R Williamson ◽  
Keith Bodger

ObjectivesKnowledge of the extent of variation in outcome assessment for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in routine practice is limited. We aimed to describe and quantify variation in outcome coverage and to explore patient, clinician and practitioner factors associated with it.DesignProspective exploratory mixed-methods study.SettingIBD clinics at six hospitals in North West England with differing electronic health record (EHR) systems.MethodsMixed-methods study comprising: (a) structured observations of outcomes elicited during consultations (102 patients consulting 24 clinicians); (b) retrospective analysis of outcomes recorded in the EHR (909 consultations; 127 clinicians) and (c) semistructured interviews with the 24 observed clinicians. We determined whether specific outcome ‘sets’ were elicited or recorded, including: (1) a minimum set of symptom pairs (‘PRO-2’); (2) symptom sets from disease activity indices and (3) a reference list of 37 symptoms, signs and impacts. Factors associated with variation were explored in univariate and multivariate binary logistic regression analyses and from clinician interviews.ResultsPRO-2 coverage was not invariable (elicited during 81% of observed consultations; recorded in 56% of EHR) and infrequent for complete activity indices (all domains from Harvey-Bradshaw Index: elicited, 18%; recorded, 5%). The median number of outcomes from the reference list elicited per consultation was 12 (13-fold variation) and recorded in EHR was 7 (>20-fold variation). Symptom quantification (PRO-2) seldom adhered closely to standardised descriptors and an explicit timeframe was defined rarely. PRO-2 recording in EHR was associated with a diagnosis of ulcerative colitis (OR: 2.09 (95% CI 1.15 to 3.80)) and nurse-led consultations (OR: 6.98 (95% CI 3.28 to 14.83)) and a three-way model suggested 26% of total variability lay between clinicians, 17% between patients but the remainder was unexplained. Most clinicians expressed preference for individualised health status evaluations versus standardised outcome assessments.ConclusionsThere was little evidence for standardised assessment and recording of IBD outcomes and substantial intra-clinician and inter-clinician variation from one consultation to another. Nurses demonstrated a greater tendency to standardised practice.


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