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1.
Orphanet J Rare Dis ; 19(1): 197, 2024 May 13.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38741100

BACKGROUND: Rare diseases are often complex, chronic and many of them life-shortening. In Germany, healthcare for rare diseases is organized in expert centers for rare diseases. Most patients additionally have regional general practicioners and specialists for basic medical care. Thus, collaboration and information exchange between sectors is highly relevant. Our study focuses on the patient and caregiver perspective on intersectoral and interdisciplinary care between local healthcare professionals (HCPs) and centers for rare diseases in Germany. The aims were (1) to investigate patients' and caregivers' general experience of healthcare, (2) to analyse patients' and caregivers' perception of collaboration and cooperation between local healthcare professionals and expert centers for rare diseases and (3) to investigate patients' and caregivers' satisfaction with healthcare in the expert centers for rare diseases. RESULTS: In total 299 individuals of whom 176 were patients and 123 were caregivers to pediatric patients participated in a survey using a questionnaire comprising several instruments and constructs. Fifty participants were additionally interviewed using a semistructured guideline. Most patients reported to receive written information about their care, have a contact person for medical issues and experienced interdisciplinary exchange within the centers for rare diseases. Patients and caregivers in our sample were mainly satisfied with the healthcare in the centers for rare diseases. The qualitative interviews showed a rather mixed picture including experiences of uncoordinated care, low engagement and communication difficulties between professionals of different sectors. Patients reported several factors that influenced the organization and quality of healthcare e.g. engagement and health literacy in patients or engagement of HCPs. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate the high relevance of transferring affected patients to specialized care as fast as possible to provide best medical treatment and increase patient satisfaction. Intersectoral collaboration should exceed written information exchange and should unburden patients of being and feeling responsible for communication between sectors and specialists. Results indicate a lack of inclusion of psychosocial aspects in routine care, which suggests opportunities for necessary improvements.


Rare Diseases , Humans , Rare Diseases/therapy , Germany , Male , Female , Surveys and Questionnaires , Adult , Middle Aged , Intersectoral Collaboration , Health Personnel/psychology , Delivery of Health Care , Communication , Patient Satisfaction , Young Adult , Caregivers/psychology
2.
Article De | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38019314

BACKGROUND: Rare diseases are often characterized by complex symptoms and usually require coordination of multiprofessional treatment during the diagnostic and healthcare processes. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the healthcare situation and daily life of people with rare diseases and the caregivers of children with rare diseases changed drastically. The aim of the research project RESILIENT-SE-PAN was to assess the situation of people with rare diseases and caregivers during COVID-19 and to develop recommendations based on the findings. METHODS: We conducted a mixed methods study including the perspective of people with rare diseases, caregivers and representatives from patient organizations and conducted a concluding workshop. RESULTS: The findings indicate an impact on healthcare and daily life of participants. Moreover, mental burden, supportive needs, COVID-19-specific aspects but also positive aspects were mentioned. Based on the findings from our mixed methods study, we developed 21 recommendations referring to the following topics: medical diagnostics and healthcare of the rare diseases, additional therapies and aids, access to COVID-19 information and vaccination, psychosocial support, participation and activities, patient organisations and others. DISCUSSION: The recommendations can provide an orientation for the organisation of healthcare in future crises or pandemics in order to adequately take the situations of people with rare diseases into account and consider the needs of this patient group.


COVID-19 , Pandemics , Child , Humans , Rare Diseases/diagnosis , Rare Diseases/therapy , Germany , Delivery of Health Care
3.
Orphanet J Rare Dis ; 18(1): 154, 2023 06 21.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37344904

BACKGROUND: During the COVID-19 pandemic people affected by rare diseases (RD) or caregiver of affected children have faced additional challenges. The pandemic has affected physical and mental health, social life and has led to financial consequences. Our objectives were to identify the impact of COVID-19 (1) on health care and (2) on daily life and participation of patients with RDs or caregivers from the perspective of representatives of patient organizations. Moreover, we explored their perspective on experiences of pandemic stress and resources during the pandemic. RESULTS: We conducted 18 semi-structured interviews with representatives of patient organizations (e.g. chairperson, members of the steering committee), who were asked about the experiences of their members. The interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using the framework approach. We contextualized our findings on the basis of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) model and adapted it according to identified subthemes. Patients and caregivers were confronted with aspects of pandemic stress such as lack of information, access and information regarding vaccination and being a risk group for COVID-19 infection. Physical and mental functioning was reported to be negatively impacted. Lock downs and contact restrictions led, e.g., to increasing lack of nursing services or lack of necessary informal support. Participation e.g. in social life and work was reduced. Health care services including medical care and supportive care as well as additional therapies were disrupted and greater effort was necessary to organize care. According to participants, central resources were informal support networks, digitalization, patient organizations and individual characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: Our study highlights the consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic on the situation of people affected by RDs and caregivers. Contextualization of the results into the biopsychosocial model reinforces the impact of the pandemic on health care as well as daily life and participation. Major challenges and difficulties were experienced during lockdowns and contact restrictions. Depending on the risk of an infection with COVID-19, certain patient groups were still isolated and reduced social contacts or still followed strict hygienic measures (e.g., wearing medical masks). Future pandemic control measures, e.g. on lockdowns and closing facilities, should consider the challenges of people with RDs and caregivers of affected children.


COVID-19 , Rare Diseases , Child , Humans , Pandemics , COVID-19/epidemiology , Communicable Disease Control , Delivery of Health Care
4.
Article De | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37311814

BACKGROUND: Rare diseases often present complex symptoms and usually require intersectoral collaboration during diagnostic and therapeutic processes involving inpatient and outpatient care. Hence, smooth interfaces with little loss of information and cooperation are essential to provide appropriate care. Our study, the project ESE-Best, aims at developing recommendations for the design and implementation of intersectoral care for patients with rare diseases using various survey instruments. METHODS: Using quantitative and qualitative methods, multiple perspectives (primary physicians, expert centers of rare diseases, patients, parents) were assessed. Additionally, two expert workshops were conducted. RESULTS: Based on findings from our data, we formulated 28 recommendations in the following areas: (1) networking between primary physicians and expert centers, (2) intersections within the expert centers, (3) awareness of rare diseases, structures of expert centers and responsibilities, (4) collaboration between expert centers and patients/caregivers, and (5) further recommendations. CONCLUSION: Our recommendations provide a basis for a working management of intersectoral care in rare diseases. As the recommendations are based on broad data including multiple perspectives, external validity and feasibility can be assumed. Still, time and human resources as well as organizational structures in single centers or practices and regional structures need to be taken into account as they may impact intersectoral care.


Intersectoral Collaboration , Rare Diseases , Humans , Rare Diseases/diagnosis , Rare Diseases/therapy , Germany , Delivery of Health Care , Health Facilities
5.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37047974

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a neurodegenerative disorder that is characterized by progressive weakness, respiratory insufficiency, and dysphagia. Due to symptom burden and disease progress, its care management and impact on daily life can severely burden the families of affected children. The objectives of this study are (1) to explore the health care experiences and (2) to investigate the psychosocial needs of the parents of children with SMA. In total, 29 parents of patients with SMA participated in our study. All children received supportive therapy (e.g., physiotherapy) and most were dependent on medical equipment. Parents perceived the health care positively regarding team quality, communication and access to medical care. An assessment of the impact of the child's health on the family (e.g., stressors, burden, consequences) is not routinely integrated into care. On average, parents reported low to medium levels of psychosocial needs. Due to the complex health care needs of SMA patients, the health care experiences of parents can provide relevant information on care delivery. To enhance the inclusion of psychosocial and emotional issues, as well as family impact, into routine health care, health care providers should be sensitive towards parental needs for consistency in the health care team and emotional aspects and, if applicable, address them proactively.


Muscular Atrophy, Spinal , Humans , Child , Health Personnel , Patient Care Team , Surveys and Questionnaires , Delivery of Health Care
6.
Orphanet J Rare Dis ; 17(1): 274, 2022 07 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35854387

BACKGROUND: Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a rare degenerative neuromuscular disease, mostly occurring in infants and children, leading to muscle wasting and weakness, and premature death. Due to new developments of multiple disease-modifying treatments within the last years, the interest of research in patients affected by SMA increased steadily. However, the psychosocial situation of parents as informal caregivers is still rarely addressed. OBJECTIVES: This review aims to highlight quantitative and qualitative data about the psychosocial situation, caregiver burden, and needs of parents as informal caregivers for children and adolescents with SMA. METHODS: A systematic literature review was performed including quantitative and qualitative original studies focusing on different psychosocial aspects and outcomes for parents of children and adolescents < 21 years of age with SMA type I-IV (PROSPERO; registration number CRD42020219020). We searched the following databases in November 2020 with a research update in August 2021: MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO and Web of Science. RESULTS: In total, 24 articles from 23 studies were selected for inclusion (15 quantitative studies, 7 articles from 6 qualitative studies, 2 mixed methods studies). The synthesis of included studies shows multiple sources of psychosocial burden for parents of children and adolescents affected by SMA: Most studies found reduced levels of quality of life, moderate to high levels of caregiver burden and distress, as well as physical and mental health symptoms. Further, findings indicate several unmet family needs regarding information, care coordination, treatment decisions, financial support, and adequate supportive care services. CONCLUSION: Parents of children and adolescents with SMA face multiple sources of psychosocial stressors, caregiver burden and various unmet family needs. To unburden families, the needs of parents as caregivers should be included in integrated care paths for SMA to improve their psychosocial situation and thus their ability to care for their children and to treat or prevent physical and mental health problems due to overburdening. Future research should focus not only on quality of life and on caregiving-related burden but should also examine the clinical relevance of reported symptoms to support the implementation of adequate support services for families affected by SMA.


Caregivers , Muscular Atrophy, Spinal , Adolescent , Caregiver Burden , Caregivers/psychology , Child , Humans , Infant , Muscular Atrophy, Spinal/psychology , Parents/psychology , Quality of Life
7.
Z Kinder Jugendpsychiatr Psychother ; 50(5): 395-406, 2022 Sep.
Article De | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35187975

Mindful Parenting: Mindfulness in the Parent-Child Relationship Abstract. Parental self-regulation is vitally important for parent-child interaction and child development. Mindfulness-based interventions generally aim at improving self-regulation by positively influencing neurocognitive functioning. The recent conceptualization of "mindful parenting" focuses on mindfulness aspects in parent-child relationships. Mindfulness-based interventions specifically for parents were recently developed and tested, especially in clinical settings. The results suggest positive effects of such programs for parents and children. For now, their nature remains preliminary, but they encourage future research.


Mindfulness , Parenting , Humans , Mindfulness/methods , Parent-Child Relations , Parenting/psychology , Parents/psychology
8.
Psychooncology ; 31(6): 869-878, 2022 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35218110

OBJECTIVE: To provide an overview of quantitative data on the impact of cancer on the mental health of patients parenting minor children. We focused on mental health outcomes, their levels and prevalence, and applied measurement tools. METHODS: MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycInfo and Web of Science were searched up to March 2021. We included quantitative studies, published in a peer-reviewed journal and reporting outcomes on the mental health (e.g., depression, anxiety) of cancer patients parenting minor children (≤ 21 years). Study quality was assessed based on the National Institute for Health assessment tool for observational studies. This study is registered on PROSPERO (CRD42019141954). RESULTS: A total of 54 articles based on 36 different studies were included in this systematic review. Studies differ markedly regarding study and sample characteristics (e.g., outcome measures, sample size, parental health status). Depression and anxiety levels range from normal to abnormal, according to applied measurement tools. 7%-83% of parents with cancer have depression scores indicating probable depression and 19%-88% have anxiety scores indicating anxiety disorder. CONCLUSIONS: This review reveals the dimension of mental burden affecting cancer patients parenting minor children. To identify, address and timely treat potentially arising mental health problems and support needs, affected parents should be closely monitored by healthcare professionals and referred to specialized support offers, if necessary. In the context of a comprehensive patient- and family-oriented care, it is highly relevant to integrate mental health (including parental) issues routinely into oncological care by proactively asking for the patient's psychosocial situation and the family status.


Neoplasms , Parenting , Anxiety/epidemiology , Anxiety/therapy , Child , Humans , Mental Health , Neoplasms/epidemiology , Parenting/psychology , Parents/psychology
9.
BMJ Open ; 10(11): e040470, 2020 11 30.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33257484

INTRODUCTION: Patients and families affected by a rare disease are burdened in multiple ways. Functional interface management can unburden patients or relatives from the need to be solely accountable for the navigation through the healthcare system. This study aims at (1) providing an assessment of approaches and interface management concepts in the care of rare diseases, (2) evaluating selected existing approaches and concepts and (3) developing best practice recommendations for interface management. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We will conduct a mixed-methods study with three phases. In phase 1, we will develop a tool to assess existing concepts of interface management for rare diseases based on a literature search and an expert workshop. The tool will be applied in a telephone survey with representatives of centres or clinics of expertise for rare diseases (target: n=100) and cooperating practitioners (target: n=60). Based on the results of phase 1, we will select four to six centres of expertise with interface management concepts, which will be evaluated extensively in phase 2. For the evaluation, we will conduct semistructured interviews with practitioners cooperating with centres or clinics for rare diseases (target: n=50), a paper-based survey including patients or parents/legal guardians (target: n=300) from the selected centres or clinics, and semistructured interviews with patients or parents/legal guardians (target: n=50). The final phase of the study will be an integration of results from phases 1 and 2 to develop best practice recommendations for interface management in healthcare of rare diseases. In a concluding expert workshop, recommendations will be presented and finalised. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study was approved by the Local Psychological Ethics Committee of the Center for Psychosocial Medicine of the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (LPEK-0062). The findings of our study will be presented on national and international conferences and published in scientific, peer-reviewed journals. To assure that centres for rare diseases get access to the study results, centres are invited to send a representative to a final expert workshop in phase 3. Moreover, an executive summary will be provided and sent to relevant stakeholders. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: German Clinical Trials Registry (DRKS00020488).


Delivery of Health Care , Rare Diseases , Clinical Trials as Topic , Germany , Health Facilities , Health Personnel , Humans , Rare Diseases/therapy
10.
Trials ; 21(1): 114, 2020 Jan 28.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31992356

BACKGROUND: Mindfulness training (MT) for parents of adolescents has been shown to improve mental health and stress-related outcomes in individuals and their families. Studies of MT among young people are mainly delivered in educational or clinical settings, and there is a need for controlled studies on both parent-directed and adolescent-directed approaches. It is unclear whether MT has preventive effects for substance use outcomes. The primary objective of this trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of family-based MT targeting both adolescents and their parents to prevent adolescent substance use and enhance neurobehavioral self-regulation skills that play a major role in addiction development and mental health. METHODS/DESIGN: The trial design is a superiority, two-arm, randomized controlled trial in which families will participate either in the full curriculum of the evidence-based Strengthening Families Program 10-14 (SFP 10-14, German adaptation) or in a mindfulness-enhanced version of this program (SFP-Mind). Both seven-session interventions are highly structured and will each be delivered over a period of approximately 7 weeks. The experimental intervention SFP-Mind is a modified version of the SFP 10-14 in which some elements were eliminated or changed to enable the inclusion of additional parent-directed and adolescent-directed mindfulness components. The primary outcome is adolescent self-reported alcohol use based on an alcohol initiation index at 18-month follow-up. Dispositional mindfulness, impulsivity, and emotion regulation will be included as secondary outcomes and potential mechanisms of action. The study will recruit and randomize 216 adolescents, aged 10-14 years, and their parents who will be followed up for 18 months. DISCUSSION: This trial aims to evaluate the effectiveness of SFP-Mind for family-based prevention of substance use and promoting mental health in adolescence. TRIAL REGISTRATION: German Register of Clinical Studies, DRKS00015678. Registered on 25 February 2019.


Adolescent Behavior , Family Therapy/methods , Marijuana Use , Mindfulness/methods , Parents , Tobacco Use/prevention & control , Underage Drinking/prevention & control , Adolescent , Child , Germany , Humans , Self-Control , Substance-Related Disorders/prevention & control
11.
Hum Mutat ; 33(5): 803-8, 2012 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22422702

Rare disorders are scarcely represented in international classifications and therefore invisible in information systems. One of the major needs in health information systems and for research is to share and/or to integrate data coming from heterogeneous sources with diverse reference terminologies. ORPHANET (www.orpha.net) is a multilingual information portal on rare diseases and orphan drugs. Orphanet information system is supported by a relational database built around the concept of rare disorders. Representation of rare diseases in Orphanet encompasses levels of increasing complexity: lexical (multilingual terminology), nosological (multihierarchical classifications), relational (annotations-epidemiological data-and classes of objects-genes, manifestations, and orphan drugs-integrated in a relational database), and interoperational (semantic interoperability). Rare disorders are mapped to International Classification of Diseases (10th version), SNOMED CT, MeSH, MedDRA, and UMLS. Genes are cross-referenced with HGNC, UniProt, OMIM, and Genatlas. A suite of tools allow for extraction of massive datasets giving different views that can be used in bioinformatics to answer complex questions, intended to serve the needs of researchers and the pharmaceutical industry in developing medicinal products for rare diseases. An ontology is under development. The Orphanet nomenclature is at the crossroads of scientific data repositories and of clinical terminology standards, and is suitable to be used as a standard terminology.


Online Systems , Rare Diseases , Databases, Factual , Humans , Information Dissemination , Rare Diseases/classification , Terminology as Topic
12.
Water Sci Technol ; 45(8): 181-2, 2002.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12019818

Land use changes, such as deforestation, are increasing the world's vulnerability to flooding. Detailed knowledge of the local situation is essential for risk assessment and design of effective flood prevention measures and governs the infrastructure and engineering measures implemented. However extreme floods in large catchments can overwhelm both natural capacity and constructed flood management measures.


Disaster Planning , Disasters , Forestry , Agriculture , Environment , Humans , Mortality , Risk Assessment , Water Supply
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